Extract from The Guardian
Exclusive: Lobby group links technology to identification of people barred from venues for disorderly behaviour.
Fri 28 Oct 2022 02.00 AEDT
Last modified on Fri 28 Oct 2022 02.02 AEDTA week after ClubsNSW announced it would roll out facial recognition technology to pubs and clubs across the state as a harm minimisation tool that could “only be used to enforce self exclusion” by gamblers, it now concedes its use will be more widespread.
The revelation came after the NSW crime commission released a damning report on Wednesday which found billions of dollars in “dirty” money is being gambled in pubs and clubs in the state every year.
The report called for the introduction of a cashless gambling card to address what it said was a “$95bn-a-year information black hole” for authorities attempting to track the proceeds of crime.
But in a statement after the report’s release, the ClubsNSW chief executive, Josh Landis, cited the use of facial recognition technology along with a crime commission recommendation for an exclusion register to allow police to alert venues to “patrons with criminal links”, as making it “near impossible for a criminal to enter a club in the future”.
Those comments contradicted what ClubsNSW said when it announced the use of the technology only a week ago.
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At the time ClubsNSW and the Australian Hotels Association said facial recognition technology would be used to “combat problem gambling”, saying that it could “only [ClubsNSW’s italics] be used to enforce self-exclusion in gaming areas”.
When Guardian Australia asked ClubsNSW about the discrepancy, the lobby group did not acknowledge the change in its position, but pointed to legislation introduced last week by the state’s gaming minister, Kevin Anderson, formalising the use of the technology.
The bill would allow the use of “technology” to “identify, and prevent” people from entering a club or pub if that person has been “excluded” from a venue.
NSW Greens MP Cate Faehrmann said the change in ClubsNSW position showed the “claims that they’re serious about stopping money laundering are totally disingenuous”.
“Clubs NSW are desperately attempting to appear as though they’ve solved the problems plaguing their industry without having to undergo genuine reform to clean it up,” she said.
The cashless gambling card was championed by former gaming minister Victor Dominello before he was removed from the portfolio by the premier after opposition to the proposal from the gambling lobby.
On Wednesday the NSW premier, Dominic Perrottet, said he was open to considering its use, but wanted to “work very closely with industry”.
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