London handheld facial recognition pilot: choose limits, places, and review dates

Proposal from group Concorder Civic Lab
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Proposal text

Here's the matter we want to address together: click on each paragraph to add your votable contribution

Context

London is preparing a six-month pilot where officers can use handheld facial recognition to verify identity during encounters. City Hall argues quick verification can prevent unnecessary arrests when someone can’t easily prove who they are. Critics argue it could normalize face scanning in everyday policing and widen the impact of stop-and-check, especially if oversight and reporting are weak.

People often talk past each other on this topic. Some want an outright pause. Others want a tightly limited pilot that either proves itself under strict scrutiny or stops. Another group wants expansion sooner. The details that matter most are concrete: where it can be used, when the public sees results, and what triggers a stop.

What is being decided

This proposal sets three linked choices. First, the overall stance on the pilot. Second, where it is allowed to operate. Third, when the first public review must happen, so governance is not pushed to the end after habits form.

Voting options

Vote on the different proposed options to find the best solution together.

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Pause use until independent oversight is in place

Hold deployment until there is a clear oversight structure with audit powers, published reporting, and the ability to halt the program if standards are not met.

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Builds public confidence by putting accountability first.
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Delays any claimed benefit of faster identity verification during encounters.
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Run a narrow pilot with hard limits and automatic stop conditions

Keep it time-limited and tightly scoped, require documented justification for each use, and publish results regularly. If thresholds are breached, the pilot stops automatically.

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Allows evidence-based evaluation without turning the city into an open-ended test site.
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Only credible if reporting is detailed, frequent, and independently checked.
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Expand use faster under internal controls and training

Increase operational rollout quickly and rely on training, internal governance, and supervisory review rather than new external guardrails.

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Fastest route to operational impact if leadership believes benefits are clear.
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Risks deepening mistrust if independent scrutiny is not strengthened.

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Sources

  • The Guardian

    Reports the six-month pilot and debates around oversight, privacy, and operational claims.

  • The Telegraph

    Reports the planned deployment of handheld facial recognition and operational framing from supporters.

  • Statewatch

    Argues for stronger regulation and meaningful protections around police facial recognition.

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