How ICE Already Knows Who Minneapolis Protesters Are [View all]
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/30/technology/tech-ice-facial-recognition-palantir.html
ICE is using two facial recognition programs in Minnesota, they said, including one made by the tech company Clearview AI and a newer program, Mobile Fortify. The agency is also using cellphone and social media tools to monitor peoples online activity and potentially hack into phones. And agents are tapping into a database, built by the data analytics company Palantir, that combines government and commercial data to identify real-time locations for individuals they are pursuing, the current and former officials said.
The technologies are being deployed, or appear to be deployed, in a much more aggressive way than we have seen in the past, said Nathan Freed Wessler, a lawyer at the American Civil Liberties Union, which has sued the Homeland Security Department over the immigration operation in Minneapolis. The conglomeration of all these technologies together is giving the government unprecedented abilities.
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In September, the Homeland Security Department also spent nearly $10 million acquiring at least three social media monitoring tools and services that allow it to delve into peoples cellphones, according to procurement records and public contracts for the project.
One of the tools, which was built by Paragon, an Israeli technology company, lets people take control of phones or remotely hack into them to read messages or track locations. The others were built by Penlink, a Nebraska-based software company. They use social media data scraped from the web and information from data brokers to help build dossiers of anyone with a social media account.