Rights groups pressure IBM to renounce interest in
Trump's 'extreme vetting'
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[November 16, 2017]
By Dustin Volz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A coalition of
rights groups launched an online petition on Thursday urging IBM Corp to
renounce a Trump administration proposal to use technology to identify
people for visa denial and deportation from the United States.
Chip maker IBM has been targeted because, alongside several other
companies and contractors, it attended a July informational session
hosted by immigration enforcement officials that discussed developing
technology for vetting, said Steven Renderos, organizing director at
petitioner the Center for Media Justice.
The use of such technology would run counter to the company's goals to
protect so-called "Dreamer" immigrants from deportation, the rights
groups said.
The petition is tied to a broader advocacy campaign, also begun
Thursday, that objects to the "Extreme Vetting Initiative" being pursued
by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). The vetting move is
in alignment with President Donald Trump's desire to harden screening
procedures for immigrants entering the country.
IBM did not respond when asked about the petition or its potential work
on the Extreme Vetting Initiative.
ICE wants to use machine learning technology and social media monitoring
to determine whether an individual is a "positively contributing member
of society," according to documents published on federal contracting
websites in recent months.
More than 50 civil society groups and more than 50 technical experts
sent separate letters to the Department of Homeland Security on Thursday
saying the vetting program as described was "tailor-made for
discrimination" and that artificial intelligence was unable to provide
the information ICE desired.
Trump has said such procedures are necessary to protect national
security and curtail illegal immigration.
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The logo for IBM is seen at the SIBOS banking and financial
conference in Toronto, Ontario, Canada October 19, 2017. Picture
taken October 19, 2017. REUTERS/Chris Helgren
The pressure on IBM is the latest example of technology companies attracting
public scrutiny for even the possibility of working with the Trump
administration, despite their disagreements with the government on policies
ranging from immigration to trade.
Shortly after the presidential election last year, for example, several internet
firms pledged to not help Trump build a data registry to track people based on
their religion or assist in mass deportations.
IBM is among dozens of technology companies to join a legal briefing opposing
Trump's decision to end the 'Dreamer' program that protects from deportation
about 900,000 immigrants brought illegally into the United States as children.
"While on the one hand they've expressed their support for Dreamers, they're
also considering building a platform that would make it easier to deport them,"
Renderos said.
CREDO, Daily Kos, and Color of Change also organized the petition.
In an Oct. 5 email seen by Reuters, Christopher Padilla, IBM's vice president of
government affairs, wrote that it was "premature to speculate" whether IBM would
pursue business related to the Extreme Vetting Initiative because the meeting
the company attended was only informational.
IBM "would not work on any project that runs counter to our company's values,
including our long-standing opposition to discrimination against anyone on the
basis of race, gender, sexual orientation or religion," Padilla added. His email
was in response to an inquiry about the vetting program from the nonprofit group
Open Mic.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz in Washington, additional reporting by Salvador
Rodriguez in San Francisco, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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