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Retail Surveillance Company Auror Investigated Over Use by Australian Federal Police

Crikey

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Date Published
20 Aug 2024
Priority Score
3
Australian
Yes
Created
8 Mar 2025, 02:41 pm

Authors (1)

Description

The information commissioner has launched a full investigation into Auror following a Crikey report into its use by the Australian Federal Police.

Summary

The article highlights the investigation by Australia's privacy watchdog into the surveillance technology company Auror, following a report on its usage by the Australian Federal Police (AFP). The investigation, initiated due to concerns about the unregulated use of surveillance technology by the AFP, reflects broader privacy and governance challenges posed by AI in law enforcement. Auror's technology integrates facial recognition and other data, raising ethical questions regarding privacy and data sharing between retailers and law enforcement. This case underscores the importance of establishing clear regulatory frameworks for AI technologies in policing, particularly in ensuring accountability and protecting civil liberties.

Body

Retail surveillance company Auror is under investigation by Australia’s privacy watchdog following aCrikeyreport into the Australian Federal Police’s (AFP) use of its software.The Australian Information Commissioner launched an investigation into the New Zealand-based company on February 2 this year, as firstreportedby regulatory and privacy publicationMLex.Auror sells itself as helping “connect people and organisations with timely intel to proactively reduce the impacts of crime in retail stores” by pulling together facial recognition scans, license plate scanners, self-checkout AI and other data from retailers that they can share with other retailers and police.Related Article Block PlaceholderArticle ID: 1102263AFP under investigation over its use of Auror surveillance technologyCam WilsonLast year,Crikeyrevealedinternal emails from the AFP showingthat more than 100 members of its staff had used the software withoutany agency guardrails around its use.These emails showed that staff were using it to collect information from retailers not reported to police, and put police information into Auror’s systems.AfterCrikeyapproached police about its use, the AFP suspended its use of the technology. The Office of the Information Commissioner launched “preliminary inquiries” into the AFP’s use of the technologysoon afterwards.A spokesperson for the OAIC toldCrikeyit has opened a probe into the company itself, after being satisfied that the AFP’s use of the technology did not warrant an investigation.Police use of the self-described “crime intelligence platform” adopted by as many as 40% of Australian retailers haselicited concerns from privacy expertsover the sharing of information between retailers and with law enforcement without necessarily being tied to a crime.This disclosure came in response to a question during budget estimates asked by Greens Senator David Shoebridge on May 29.“The reason I’m asking is that many of the privacy investigations undertaken by your office — and I know you’ve only recently come in — have taken years to come to a conclusion,” Shoebridge said to privacy commissioner Carly Kind at the time.“That is of incredible frustration to the public, to myself and I assume to other elected representatives — the length of time these investigations are taking.”An Auror spokesperson confirmed the investigation in an emailed statement.“We are pleased to be supporting OAIC inquiries into better understanding our work,” they toldCrikey.