匈牙利使用人脸识别技术违反了欧盟人工智能法案。
Hungary's use of facial recognition violates EU AI Act

原始链接: https://www.euractiv.com/section/tech/news/hungarys-use-of-facial-recognition-violates-eu-ai-act/

匈牙利总理欧尔班·维克托提出的修改儿童保护法案,允许警方在骄傲游行活动中使用面部识别技术,这很可能违反欧盟的《人工智能法案》。该法案禁止在公共场所进行实时生物识别识别,除非在有限的情况下,例如国家安全威胁。批评人士认为,禁止骄傲游行并使用面部识别技术识别参与者是对民主价值观的公然侵犯。《人工智能法案》于2月2日生效,禁止成员国滥用实时面部识别技术,即使以国家安全为借口也不例外。匈牙利赫尔辛基委员会谴责该修正案违反了个人数据保护,而《人工智能法案》的执行则依赖于匈牙利的数据保护机构以及其他成员国挑战这些措施的意愿。欧洲议会议员丹尼尔·弗伦德等批评人士呼吁欧盟因匈牙利的“快速专制化”而扣留对其的资金。

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原文

In its latest amendment to the Hungarian Child Protection Act, Viktor Orbán's plan to use facial recognition systems against participants in pride events would violate the EU's AI Act. 

Facial recognition, used as real-time identification to allow the police to monitor public areas and identify persons of interest is, in principle, prohibited under the EU's AI Act. Police can, however, use it under certain exceptional circumstances such as a threat to national security or terrorism.

According to an amendment submitted to the Hungarian Parliament, Orbán's party would ban pride events, and argued that this assembly would run contrary to the prohibitions set under the Child Protection Act. The proposal would also allow the police to use facial recognition software to identify participants.

Dr Laura Caroli, who negotiated EU AI rules for the European Parliament explained that the use of facial recognition for such events is now "actively prohibited by the EU AI Act." The ban, under Article 5 of the AI Act, is drafted in a way to prohibit member states from abusing the use of live facial recognition.

Even if Hungary invoked national security reasons or construed a pride parade as a terrorist threat, they would still be violating the EU AI Act, she argued.

The rules on prohibited AI practices entered into force on 2 February.

The ban on pride parades has rang alarm bells in Budapest and beyond. MEP Daniel Freund, a vocal critic of Viktor Orbán's government slammed the decision and said that "abolishing the right to assembly and enforcing this measure with facial recognition software - what sounds like something out of Russia or China - is happening in an EU member state".

Freund added that "Viktor Orbán no longer even pretends to uphold democratic values. The EU must respond to this rapid autocratisation and stop transferring EU funds to the Orbán regime".

The NGO Hungarian Helsinki Committee said that this amendment would "violate the rights to personal data protection of those who participate in pride events, but also anyone whose facial image is recorded by the police during the action and then identified based on it."

However, it would be up to the Hungarian data protection authorities to enforce the AI Act's list of prohibitions against the law, and other member states will be able to oppose measures if they object, Dr Caroli specified.

"Enforcing the AI Act by Hungarian and other member state authorities will require time and in the meantime these abuses can unfortunately still happen", she added.

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