Sunday, October 27, 2019

Home Affairs pushes its face-matching service for porn age verification

parliamenthousecanberra-creative-commons.jpg

The Department of Home Affairs is hoping to use its Face Verification Service and Document Verification Service across the economy, and is backing its use for age verification for Australians to look at pornography.

Writing in a submission to the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Social Policy and Legal Affairs' inquiry, launched in September, Home Affairs said it could provide a "suite of identity-matching services".

One example highlighted by the department was the use of the Face Verification Service to prevent a child using their parent's driver licence to get around any age verification.

"Whilst they are primarily designed to prevent identity crime, Home Affairs would support the increased use of the Document and Face Verification Services across the Australian economy to strengthen age verification processes," the department wrote.

Home Affairs conceded the Face Verification Service was not operational, as it relied on the passage of biometric legislation through Parliament.

Last week, the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security said the Bills did not have sufficient privacy safeguards and needed to be redrafted.

Addressing the House of Representatives on Thursday, Committee Chair Andrew Hastie said throughout its review, the committee heard concerns over the need to ensure that appropriate governance and accountability were in place, and protection of the individual's right to privacy was at the forefront.

"The committee acknowledges these concerns and believes that while the Bill's explanatory memorandum sets out governance arrangements, such as existing and contemplated agreements and access policies, they are not adequately set out in the current Bill," he said.

"In the committee's view, robust safeguards and appropriate oversight mechanisms should be explained clearly in the legislation."

He said that although the committee expresses broad support for the objectives of the Bill, it agrees with many of the submissions it received that the Bill as it stands does not adequately incorporate enough detail.

Related Coverage

Home Affairs to refresh providers of 5,500 video surveillance cameras

The department currently uses AXIS cameras, CISCO switches, and HP servers across 112 sites around Australia.

Home Affairs still the 'baddest' at handling Australian stored communications

Australian cops have a problem with timely destroying stored communications.

Department of Home Affairs extends cyber consulting contract with Archtis

The cybersecurity firm will continue to provide its professional consulting and IT strategic advisory services to the department for another 12 months.

Home Affairs floats making telcos retain MAC addresses and port numbers

Soon it might just be easier for Australia's telcos to keep a copy of every TCP or UDP header for the cops to poke through.

Home Affairs says no problems with encryption laws even though local companies suffer

The department said it is however 'focused' on addressing the negative perception of Australia's encryption laws, saying companies actually lack a clear understanding of the obligations within legislation.



from Latest Topic for ZDNet in... https://ift.tt/36c3YNe

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.