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Answer Overview

Response rates from 408 University--Rosedale voters.

35%
Yes
65%
No
25%
Yes
56%
No
8%
Yes, but only if it’s tightly regulated and used with transparency
7%
No, it sets a dangerous precedent for government control over citizens
2%
Yes, but only targeting criminal hotspots to protect vulnerable communities
2%
No, I trust the technology but not the humans that could misuse it
1%
No, this would be too expensive to implement

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 408 University--Rosedale voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 408 University--Rosedale voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from University--Rosedale voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @B27PCQLfrom Alberta  answered…2mos2MO

No, the technology is trustworthy but it sets a dangerous precedent for the government and requires too much trust as it can be misused.

 @B3HJK9Rfrom Manitoba  answered…1wk1W

No, facial recognition and profiling technologies have already been shown to be unreliable by being prone to false positives and biased if trained by a human (biggest example is racial profiling). As well, the potential for misuse should be considered.

 @B3DKZ6Sfrom Ontario  answered…2wks2W

Yes, but they should consider the fact that faces can be manipulated either online(editing) or in real life(plastic surgery)

 @B39XQHFfrom Alberta  answered…2wks2W

No, but my only reason for this is because what if a person travels far away to get plastic surgery and when they try to come home the face id cant recognize them so now they cannot come back home.

 @B39DTY7from Ontario  answered…2wks2W

This sets a dangerous precedent that can be potentially abused by corrupt officials therefore it must be tightly regulated and only used in targeting hotspots for protection of innocents

 @B38K4D7 from Washington  answered…2wks2W

No and no. Humans misuse power, governments control/have power over citizens, citizens are being controlled by the government.

 @B35GVYNanswered…3wks3W

With facial recognition technology, having a known flaw in recognizing the faces of black and brown people, it is unreliable at best, inherently racist, and fallible at worst.

 @B34S6LNfrom Ontario  answered…3wks3W

no, it has been proven that facial recognition technology does not identify visible minorities correctly