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Argentina to Utilize AI for Predicting Future Crimes Amid Concerns for Citizens' Rights

The Guardian

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Date Published
1 Aug 2024
Priority Score
3
Australian
No
Created
10 Mar 2025, 10:27 pm

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President Javier Milei creates security unit as some say certain groups may be overly scrutinized by the technology

Summary

Argentina's government has announced plans to deploy AI technology to predict future crimes, a move that raises concerns about potential threats to citizens' rights. The initiative involves a newly created security unit that will use machine-learning algorithms to analyze crime data, along with employing facial recognition software and monitoring social media. While officials claim the technology will enhance security, human rights organizations warn it could lead to excessive surveillance and profiling, drawing parallels to the nation's oppressive past. This development underscores the broader debate over AI governance and its implications for privacy and freedom, highlighting significant risks attached to expanded use of AI in law enforcement.

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Javier Milei gives a speech in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on 28 July 2024.Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesView image in fullscreenJavier Milei gives a speech in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on 28 July 2024.Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesThis article is more than7 months oldArgentina will use AI to ‘predict future crimes’ but experts worry for citizens’ rightsThis article is more than 7 months oldPresident Javier Milei creates security unit as some say certain groups may be overly scrutinized by the technologyArgentina’s security forces have announced plans to use artificial intelligence to “predict future crimes” in a move experts have warned could threaten citizens’ rights.The country’s far-right president Javier Milei this week created theArtificial Intelligence Applied to SecurityUnit, which the legislation says will use “machine-learning algorithms to analyse historical crime data to predict future crimes”. It is also expected to deploy facial recognition software to identify “wanted persons”, patrol social media, and analyse real-time security camera footage to detect suspicious activities.While the ministry of security has said the new unit will help to “detect potential threats, identify movements of criminal groups or anticipate disturbances”, the Minority Report-esque resolution has sent alarm bells ringing amonghuman rights organisations.Experts fear that certain groups of society could be overly scrutinised by the technology, and have also raised concerns over who – and how many security forces – will be able to access the information.Amnesty International warned that the move could infringe on human rights. “Large-scale surveillance affects freedom of expression because it encourages people to self-censor or refrain from sharing their ideas or criticisms if they suspect that everything they comment on, post, or publish is being monitored by security forces,” said Mariela Belski, the executive director of Amnesty International Argentina.Meanwhile, the Argentine Center for Studies on Freedom of Expression and Access to Information said suchtechnologies have historicallybeen used to “profile academics, journalists, politicians and activists”, which, without supervision, threatens privacy.Milei, a far-right libertarian, rose to power late last year and has promised a hardline response to tackling crime. His security minister Patricia Bullrich reportedlyseeks to replicateEl Salvador’s controversial prison model, while the administration is moving towards militarising security policy, according to theCenter for Legal and Social Studies. The government has alsocracked down on protests, with riot police recently shooting tear gas and rubber bullets at demonstrators at close range, and officials threatening to sanction parents who bring children to marches.‘Justification of dictatorship’: outcry as Milei rewrites Argentina’s historyRead moreThe latest measure has prompted an especially strong reaction in a country with a dark history of state repression; an estimated 30,000 people were forcibly disappeared during its brutal 1976-83 dictatorship, some thrown alive from planes on so-called “death flights”. Thousands were also tortured, and hundreds of children kidnapped.A ministry of security source said that the new unit will work under the current legislative framework, including the Personal Information Protection Act mandate. It added that it will concentrate in applying AI, data analytics and machine learning to identify criminal patterns and trends in the ministry of security databases.Explore more on these topicsArgentinaAmericasArtificial intelligence (AI)newsShareReuse this content