Facial Recognition in Anderstorp Upper Secondary School (Skelleftea, Sweden)
Summary |
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Products and Institutions:
Product Deployed | Unknown Technology 0021 |
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Institutions ⠉ | Unknown Institution 0020 |
Datasets | Dataset of School Students |
Search software |
Status and Events:
Status | Unknown |
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Events | Start (August 2018, Documented, ?, No description) |
Start Date | |
End Date |
Users:
Involved Entities | Swedish Authority for Privacy Protection (IMY) |
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Managed by | Skelleftea Municipality |
Used by |
Location:
City | Skelleftea |
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Country ⠉ | Sweden |
Description[ ]
Description[edit | ]
The Swedish Data Protection Authority (DPA) fined the Skelleftea municipality 200,000 Swedish Krona (£16,800, $20,700) for flouting a privacy law.
The trial involved tracking 22 students over three weeks and detecting when each pupil entered a classroom.
This is the first time that Sweden has ever issued a fine under GDPR.
The General Data Protection Regulation, which came into force last year, classes facial images and other biometric information as being a special category of data, with added restrictions on its use.
The DPA indicated that the fine would have been bigger had the trial been longer.
According to technology magazine ComputerSweden, Swedish authorities decided to investigate after reading media reports of Anderstorp's High School's trial. 1
The local authority told Swedish state broadcaster SVT Nyheter in February that teachers had been spending 17,000 hours a year reporting attendance, and the authority had decided to see whether facial-recognition technology could speed up the process.