Minutes Exhibit D

From:            Daniel Weise
To:                Commission-Public-Records
Cc:                Bowman, Stephanie; Calkins, Ryan; Cho, Sam; Felleman, Fred; Steinbrueck, Peter; Daniel Weise
Subject:           [EXTERNAL] Facial recognition is dangerous, please extend the moratorium and ban its use.
Date:              Tuesday, July 14, 2020 7:12:41 AM
WARNING: This is an external email. Do not click on links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and
expect the content of this email to be safe.

Commissioners,
I am writing to urge you to vote to extend the moratorium on police use of face surveillance
technology. Please go even further and ban the use of facial recognition by all law
enforcement and their contractors. I also urge you to stop collaborating with Customs and
Border Protection (CBP) in building a face surveillance system at SeaTac International
Airport.
Facial recognition technology is racist. This technology also enables government surveillance
on a massive scale. Cities across the U.S. are banning facial recognition technology, noting its
role in exacerbating the surveillance and policing of Black, Indigenous, and people of color,
immigrants, and other communities in the margins.
The Port Commission's March vote to collaborate with CBP in rolling out its facial
recognition program ignored the concerns of privacy, civil liberties, and community
organizations. The Port of Seattle should not be paying for or building a facial recognition
system for CBP.
I strongly urge you to extend the moratorium, ban all use of facial recognition by Port of
Seattle Police and privately contracted security, and to reverse the decision to collaborate with
CBP.
Sincerely,
Daniel Weise

Limitations of Translatable Documents

PDF files are created with text and images are placed at an exact position on a page of a fixed size.
Web pages are fluid in nature, and the exact positioning of PDF text creates presentation problems.
PDFs that are full page graphics, or scanned pages are generally unable to be made accessible, In these cases, viewing whatever plain text could be extracted is the only alternative.