Tatiana Bazzichelli via nettime-l on Thu, 9 Oct 2025 16:30:03 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Techno-Policing & Civic Control - 16 Oct - Berlin |
Dear Nettime List, I would like to inform you about our next event in Berlin at nGbK: Techno-Policing & Civic Control: Talk & Q&A Thursday, October 16, 2025 7:00pm – 9:00pmWith Sonja Peteranderl (Investigative Journalist, Founder of BuzzingCities Lab, DE) and Matthias Monroy (Journalist, Activist, Expert on Civil Rights, Policing, and Security Technologies, DE).
Free entrance with registration. Registration is open to all, with participation limited to 70 people.
Register: https://www.disruptionlab.org/event/techno-policingThis meetup follows the programme of the Disruption Network Lab’s conference TECHNOVIOLENCE: Confronting Systemic Injustice (19–21 September 2025, https://www.disruptionlab.org/technoviolence). It will bring investigative journalist Sonja Peteranderl and journalist and activist Matthias Monroy into dialogue, with the former providing insight into ongoing predictive policing experiments and the latter tracing the history of facial recognition systems in Germany. How do these systems function, or fail, and how do they reinforce and exacerbate discrimination in Germany? The meetup will explore this phenomenon and discuss potential countermeasures with activists, artists, and the wider civil society.
The German police are increasingly focusing on digital possibilities for ‘predicting’ and ‘preventing’ crimes and other incidents that may occur in the future. They have significantly increased their operational use of 'predictive' data analysis and algorithms in recent years, including geographic crime 'prediction', individual profiling, and data analysis to predict the risk of individuals committing violent acts in future. In this digital ecosystem, the police are also becoming increasingly dependent on commercial players such as the controversial US tech firm Palantir. Its “Gotham” software sifts through large volumes of data, identifying patterns and drawing connections to generate new grounds for suspicion.
Police facial recognition systems have existed in Germany since 2008. The number of queries and affected individuals increases every year; currently, the INPOL database stores the faces of 5.5 million people. The system is now being converted to artificial intelligence. According to the president of the Federal Criminal Police Office, the technology can be largely automated, making an entire department redundant. Only the EU AI Act still requires a final human review of matches. Retrospective facial analyses are increasingly used at the European level as well, with Germany pushing the networking of such systems under the Prüm framework. At the same time, the U.S. government is demanding access to these biometric databases. A legal amendment would also allow German police to conduct facial comparisons online. After pilot projects, real-time recognition is now being introduced in public spaces: Saxony has implemented a system that is also used in mobile units along the border with Poland. In Hesse, a KI-based facial recognition is being rolled out for the first time to issue alerts in the search for “Gefährder” or missing children.
SpeakersSonja Peteranderl is an investigative journalist and the founder of BuzzingCities Lab – a think tank focusing on violence, crime and the impact of technology – and The School of Conflict & Peace. She covers organized crime, violence, relationship & digital violence, security/policing and tech trends, from predictive policing to criminal innovation for SWR Vollbild, SPIEGEL, Zeit or AlgorithmWatch. She teaches at the Hamburg Media School and is a mediator (International Peace Mediation).
Matthias Monroy is a journalist, activist, and expert on civil rights, policing, and security technologies in Europe. He works as editor for the civil rights journal Bürgerrechte & Polizei/CILIP and for nd.DerTag. His data-driven research and critical reporting published also in left-wing media relates to police practices, digital surveillance and European security policy.
More info: https://www.disruptionlab.org/event/techno-policing -- Tatiana Bazzichelli // Artistic Director Disruption Network Lab https://www.disruptionlab.org/ E-mail for personal messages: tbazz(at)disruptionlab.org Twitter: @disruptberlin // @t_bazz Fingerprint: A87C 3637 03ED 1D1C E6FE E828 1F55 2B2F F5A5 C9A0 From Message-ID: <5bdcd1f5-aeb6-4692-9c3b-e66d1e6d1ea0@ -- # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: https://www.nettime.org # contact: nettime-l-owner@lists.nettime.org