
Not even a month ago, I wrote about how the Trump Regime is using AI to determine which Americans would be loyal to him and which ones would betray him. Even the slightest facial reaction would result in that person being singled out and “disappeared.”
Even scarier is the news coming from Alt National Park Service, based on multiple sources. People wishing to be on the streets, be it for protesting or for doing errands, should really consider wearing facial covering when going out.
Yes, the facial masks must go on before going out!
It has nothing to do with a virus that is affecting the American landscape, like we had with Covid-19, five years ago. It has to do with the protection from being scanned by ICE-Troops, using a simple Smartphone. New software for facial recognition is being used to scan faces of Americans and save them in the databanks. These will be used to track down and arrest dissidents, even when fleeing the country. Biometrics have been useful for facial recognition and finger-scanning people at airports, train stations and even shipping ports for two decades with the purpose of tracking their visas to ensure that they would not overstay in a foreign country. Years later, it is being used as a weapon, providing additional support to track down dissidents and political opponents.
Here’s a look at the story by ANPS with links to the sources to follow. Stay safe out there, folks.
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Let’s talk about ICE. This post is long, but it’s worth reading to understand how to protect your right to privacy.
It might sound extreme, but everyday Americans may soon want to consider face coverings for reasons far beyond health or fashion. Our Constitution guarantees a right to privacy, yet that right is being steadily eroded by the Trump administration’s expanding surveillance powers. ICE has quietly introduced a new mobile app called Mobile Fortify, a tool that allows agents to scan a person’s face or take contactless fingerprints directly from a smartphone. The app connects in real time to massive federal biometric databases, including those used by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, to verify identity and immigration status instantly.
Leaked internal documents reveal that the app can cross-reference a captured image against hundreds of millions of stored photos in systems like the Traveler Verification Service and the Automated Biometric Identification System, databases originally designed for border control but now deployed deep inside the country. If the algorithm flags someone as “not a U.S. citizen,” agents can override traditional proof of citizenship, even something as official as a birth certificate, in favor of whatever the system reports. And those scanned have no right to refuse, including U.S. citizens.
What makes this especially alarming is the system’s reach and permanence. Mobile Fortify is capable of storing facial images and fingerprint scans for up to 15 years, regardless of a person’s immigration or citizenship status. Each scan can pull up personal data (photo, date of birth, nationality) and even logs GPS coordinates of where the scan occurred. ICE has provided almost no details about how errors are handled or whether individuals are notified of false matches, and there’s no clear policy limiting who can access or share that data once it’s collected.
This is a turning point a shift toward biometric policing becoming a part of everyday American life. The same surveillance systems once confined to airports and borders are now appearing in neighborhoods, workplaces, and public demonstrations. There’s no opt-out, no warrant requirement, and almost no oversight. In a nation built on personal freedom, the idea that the government can identify, track, and store your data simply by pointing a phone at your face should alarm everyone citizens and non-citizens alike.
Sources:
Article on the use of AI for face recognition can be found here:
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