Will Milei's AI Policing Plan Become a Tool for Social Control?
Argentina's self-proclaimed libertarian president touts a crime-fighting plan that sounds like Minority Report.

Argentine President Javier Milei announced an ambitious plan to use artificial intelligence to predict, detect, and investigate crimes. While the initiative aims to enhance security, it raises serious concerns about extensive surveillance and policing.
Last week, Argentina's Ministry of Security unveiled the Artificial Intelligence Applied to Security Unit (UIAAS), which aims to use "machine-learning algorithms to analyze historical crime data to predict future crimes and help prevent them." The tools at the UIAAS's disposal include facial recognition software, social media monitoring, drone surveillance, and real-time security footage analysis to identify political threats and criminal groups.
"The advancement of technology, particularly artificial intelligence, represents one of the most relevant socio-technological changes for the general population," said Security Minister Patricia Bullrich, citing the United States, China, India, and Israel as examples of countries using AI in security operations.
Bullrich emphasized that the UIAAS would "significantly improve the efficiency of the different areas of the ministry and of the federal police and security forces, allowing for faster and more precise responses to threats and emergencies."
The new AI unit will consist of police officers and agents from various security forces tasked with overseeing the "prevention, detection, investigation, and prosecution of crime." Key functions include identifying cyber threats, handling bomb disposal with robots, enhancing communication speed among security teams, and managing large volumes of data. Additionally, the UIAAS will monitor social media networks in real time to detect potential threats, suspicious financial transactions, and other indicators of illegal activities.
Despite Milei's libertarian stance on several issues like privatization and deregulation, there are growing fears that Argentina's predictive policing program could become a tool for oppression, leading to extensive monitoring of citizens and threats to their freedoms.
"Large-scale surveillance affects freedom of expression because it encourages people to self-censor or refrain from sharing their ideas or criticisms," says Amnesty International Executive Director Mariela Belski about the program.
"The government body created to patrol social networks, applications and websites contradicts several articles of the National Constitution," Martín Becerra, a professor and researcher in media and information technology, told El País. "The government of Milei (and Bullrich) is anti-liberal. It decrees new regulations, reinforces the state's repressive function, increases the opacity of public funds and eliminates norms that sought to protect the most vulnerable."
While predictive policing promises to target future risks and lower crime rates, it "has become just another excuse for the authorities to hammer those who rub them the wrong way," explains Reason's J.D. Tuccille. Similar programs in the U.S. have faced scrutiny for misusing data to target innocent people.
"The accuracy of predictive policing programs depends on the accuracy of the information they are fed," Reason's Ronald Bailey notes. "We should always keep in mind that any new technology that helps the police to better protect citizens can also be used to better oppress them."
Argentina's own history with surveillance technology adds weight to these concerns. In 2019, Buenos Aires implemented a facial recognition surveillance system, known as the Fugitive Facial Recognition System (SNRP), to identify fugitives by matching video images with a national database. But the system led to several wrongful arrests and the unlawful collection of data on hundreds of journalists, academics, and human rights activists. Legal challenges resulted in the suspension of the program in 2022, after a court ruled it unconstitutional due to inadequate control and oversight.
"Only Argentina's around 40,000 fugitives from justice may be searched for with the system," Judge Andres Gallardo said about the SNRP investigation. "But the number of personal data requested by the city was almost 10 million. The government could never explain why so much data was requested that did not belong to fugitives."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
“citing the United States”
It’s okay now because Dobbs has “morals” (exact reason given in the ruling) that over-ride a 4th Amendment right to privacy or to claim ownership of one’s self. /s
This is how the slippery-slope starts.
No widespread surveillance.
the UIAAS will monitor social media networks in real time to detect potential threats, suspicious financial transactions, and other indicators of illegal activities.
Better tone down the sarcasm here, folks. Might be picked up as potentially suspicious. "Abundance of caution", don't ya know.
Meanwhile, in the UK, elderly men are being arrested for posting opinions on Facebook the government disapproves of.
Hey, wrong-think is a present-crime.
Don't worry, Trudeau has pre-crime covered.
Canada’s Extremist Attack on Free Speech
"A bill making its way through the Canadian Parliament would impose draconian criminal penalties on hate speech and curtail people’s liberty in order to stop crimes they haven’t yet committed."
Reason Magazine has been sold at Canadian newsstands for many decades now, but I wonder if we'll ever see an article on this, as Justin isn't as dangerous to our (D)emocracy as Milei.
Mileis should remember that the government he builds will inevitably be run by a socialist. There is nothing he can do to prevent it. Whether it is the next election or in 2 decades, inevitably a socialist will get control. And they will use any of these tools to repress the people, and send the country back to its lost decades.
I know that crime is a big deal, but he is a testament that just enforcing the current laws goes a LONG, LONG way towards making the cities more safe. Trying to empower the government with these tools will backfire in the long run.
The prime minister of El Salvador arrested all MS-13 members and have kept them there to this day.
The murder rate in ES is around zero.
One has to make a choice between security and freedom.
No, one has to make a choice between unlimited tolerance and freedom for people who seek to destroy us.
“said Security Minister Patricia Bullrich, citing the United States, China, India, and Israel as examples of countries using AI in security operations.”
Cripes. No country should follow the example of the USSA.
I think the simple answer is, Millei knows less about AI than Biden does about everything. IF AI were what people think, what it is touted as, it would be a good idea. But it isn't. It is re-packaged 'expert systems' and NLP Natural Language Processing. No way it's intelligent and of course it's artificial 🙂
This may sound bad, but is there anything here that isn’t already being done by law enforcement in the US?