The Metropolitan Police is to test live facial recognition in Westminster as part of an ongoing trial of the controversial technology.

A deployment of the surveillance software will take place on Monday 17 and Tuesday 18 December in and around Soho, Piccadilly Circus and Leicester Square.

It will be used "overtly" with a uniformed presence and information leaflets available to the public, the Met said.

All faces on the database used during the deployment are people wanted by police and the courts.

Members of the public could decline to be scanned, the Met said.

Ivan Balhatchet, strategic lead for live facial technology for the Metropolitan Police Service, said: "The Met is currently developing the use of live facial recognition technology and we have committed to 10 trials during the coming months. We are now coming to the end of our trials when a full evaluation will be completed.

"We continue to engage with many different stakeholders, some who actively challenge our use of this technology.

"In order to show transparency and continue constructive debate, we have invited individuals and groups with varying views on our use of facial recognition technology to this deployment."

Privacy campaigners have repeatedly expressed concerns around the use of such technology, labelling it "dangerous and lawless".

In May, campaigners from Big Brother Watch used a Freedom of Information request to obtain figures which showed 98% of "matches" found by the technology during earlier Met Police tests were wrong.

The group now claims new figures show the technology has got worse, with inaccuracies rising to 100%.

Image: Facial recognition software was reportedly used at a Taylor Swift gig

Big Brother Watch director Silkie Carlo said: "The police's use of this authoritarian surveillance tool in total absence of a legal or democratic basis is alarming.

"Live facial recognition is a form of mass surveillance that, if allowed to continue, will turn members of the public into walking ID cards.

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"As with all mass surveillance tools, it is the general public who suffer more than criminals. The fact that it has been utterly useless so far shows what a terrible waste of police time and public money it is. It is well overdue that police drop this dangerous and lawless technology."

Earlier this week, Rolling Stone reported facial recognition software was used in a kiosk of a Taylor Swift concert in the US and images gathered cross-referenced with a database of the singer's known stalkers.

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