(WASHINGTON POST) -- Amazon pitched its facial-recognition system in the summer to Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials as a way for the agency to target or identify immigrants, a move that could shove the tech giant further into a growing debate over the industry's work with the government.
The June meeting in Silicon Valley, revealed in emails as part of a Freedom of Information Act request by the advocacy group Project On Government Oversight, show that officials from ICE and Amazon Web Services talked about implementing the tech giant's Rekognition face-scanning platform to assist with homeland security investigations.
An Amazon Web Service official specializing in federal sales contracts, whose name was redacted in the emails, wrote that the conversation involved "predictive analytics" and "Rekognition Video tagging/analysis" that could possibly allow ICE to identify people's faces from afar - a type of technology immigration officials have voiced interest in for its potential enforcement use on the southern border.