Europaudvalget 2019-20, Retsudvalget 2019-20
EUU Alm.del Bilag 897, REU Alm.del Bilag 520
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Europol
Public
I
nformation
l
EUR'-..POL
The
Hague,]O:uty
zOzO
Joint
Parliamentary
Scrutiny
Group Secretariat
To
the attention
of
the
JPSG
Co-Chairs
By
email only:
jpsg.libesecreta
riat@eu
roparl.eu
ropa,
eu
Europol
reply to
written
questions
from
MEP
Chinnici and
MEP
Breyer
to
the
Joint
Parliamentary Scrutiny
Group
(JPSG)
Dear
Co-Chairs,
In
accordance
with
Article
4.2
of
the
JPSG
Rules
of
Procedure and
Article
51
of
the
Europol Regulation, Europol
would like
to
respond
to
the
questions
raised by
JPSG
members,
Mr Breyer and
Ms
Chinnici, received
by
Europol
on
1B
June
2O2O
as
follows:
Written
question bv
MEP
Caterina Chinnici
The
use
of
facial recognition software systems.
In
the
answers
provided
to
Hon.
Breyer, Mr
Ebner, Deputy Executive
Director
Governance,
states that
Europol
uses
two
semi-automatic
facial recognition software systems
to carry
detection /cross-checking
of
suspicious
people. A
system
developed
internally
at
EUROPOL,
and another
Griffeye Analyze
DI
Pro,
purchased
through
a Swedish company
at
and
used
in 2019 to support investigations relating to
the sexual
exploitation of minors
online.
out
its
investigations
and
to
facilitate
the
1.
With
reference to the
use
of
these
systems,
how
is
respectfor
privacy
guaranteed, obviously
for
the
citizens involved
who
are
not
involved
in
the
investigations, established
by
the
General
Data
Protection
Regulation
(GDPR)?
Europol's reply:
Europol collects
and
processes
data in
the
context
of criminal
investigations
carried
out
by
EU
Member
States, which
provide
the
data in
accordance with
the
national
law
of
the
Member
State
concerned and
the
Europol Regulation,
Europol
has
implemented
the
appropriate
technical
and
organisational
measures
and
procedures
in
such
a
way
that the
data
processing complies
with Article
28 of
the
Europol Regulation
and protects
the
rights
of
the
data
REU, Alm.del - 2019-20 - Bilag 520: Europols svar på spm. stillet af medlemmer af Europa Parlamentet og nationale parlamenter i JPSG
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Europol
Public
lnformation
subjects
concerned
by introducing
the
necessary
data protection
safeguards
for the
processing
of
facial
images
which allow
or
confirm
the
unique
identification of
the
natural persons.
The
application of data protection
rules
by
Europol including
to
all
operations
performed
is
supervised
on
various
levels and
throughout
the
entire information life
cycle.
The
Data
Protection
Officer
(DPO)
has
the task
to
ensure, in an independent manner,
lawfulness
and compliance
with
the
Europol Regulation
(ER)
and
its implementing
rules.
The
DPO
is
a
member
of
staff
and
an
integral
part
of the
organisation.
External supervision
is
carried
out by the
European
Data
Protection
Supervisor
(EDPS)
including
the
authority
to
issue
processing bans in
case
of
detected
non-compliances.
The
EDPS
acts in
close
cooperation
with
national
su
pervisory
a
uthorities.
The
Europol Regulation establishes
special provisions
for
certain
categories
of
data
subjects.
Processing
of personal data in respect
of
victims
of a
criminal
offence,
witnesses
or
other
persons who can
provide information
concerning
criminal
offences,
or
in
respect
of
persons
under
the
age
of
18, shall
be
allowed
if it
is
strictly
necessary
and
proportionate
for
preventing
or
combating crime
that
falls
within
Europol's objectives.
Europol makes
a
distinction
between personal
data
in
respect
of
different
categories
of
data subjects as clear
as
possible.
Facial
images
concerning
persons
such
as
victims,
witnesses
and
persons
possessing
relevant
information,
as well
as
facial
images concerning
minors are
processed
only
if
strictly
necessary
and proportionate
for
preventing
or
combating crime
that
falls within
Europol's
objectives.
In
addition,
access
to
the
database
of
Europol's
Analysis Project
(AP)
Twins
is
restricted
to
members
of
that
team
and
the
data contained in
the
AP
is retained within
the
rules of
the
Opening
Decision
for
the
analysis
project,
which
specifically allows
that
project
to
retain data in
respect
of children
and
adults,
sexual preference and
victims.
2.
Imagining
the existence
of
a
database? How
many profiles
it
contain?
/
faces does
Europol's reply:
The facial
recognition
software
developed
internally
by
Europol
(FACE)
extracts
facial
biometric
data
from
contributions
to
Europol's
databases
related
to different
crimes
areas. The
large
majority
comes
from contributions
from
EU
Member States
and
Third
Parties
with which
Europol is mandated to
exchange personal
data;
a
smaller
number
of
images comes
from
open
sources,
e.g. from
online
terrorist
propaganda
imagery.
At
the
end
of
June
2020, almost
1
million (995,096) facial biometric entities were
accessible
through
FACE,
The large majority
falls into the
area
of
child
sexual
abuse
(>75
o/o).
Contributions
from
EU
Member
States
and
Third
Parties
to
Europol's
database
of child
sexual abuse
material
seized
in investigations and
referred
from
online service providers have
increased
significantly
over
the
years.
Currently more
than
48
million
images
and
video
files
are
available
in
Europol's database.
The high number
is
a reflection of
the
prevalence
of
this
crime in
society.
REU, Alm.del - 2019-20 - Bilag 520: Europols svar på spm. stillet af medlemmer af Europa Parlamentet og nationale parlamenter i JPSG
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Europol
Public
lnformation
3.
Are
these
databases updated?
If
yes,
how long is this data
kept?
Europol's reply:
The processing of
facial biometric
data
falls
under
the
Europol Regulation,
which
includes specific provisions
for
regular data
review. Authorised
staff
in
line
with
these
provisions
review
the
contributions
of
personal
data
regularly.
4.
Based
on
the
experience
gained, can
the error rate
of
these
facial
recognition
systems based on
biometric data already
be established?
Europol's reply:
For
the
facial
detection-comparison features, these
two
software are
using
machine-learning algorithms
that
can provide
to the
user,
for
a
given
face
(t'vector"), the similar
faces
existing
in
the
database
("candidates"),
based
on
a
calculated
threshold
that
may
vary
from
0
to
100o/o.
The
Europol internal
procedure
for
facial comparison
specifies
that
a
human operator,
trained
in
the field
of
face
comparison,
shall
further
compare
the
vector
with
the
candidates
resulted from
the output
provided
by
the
software'
The result
of the
comparison
made
by
the
human operator would
be
an
assessment
of whether candidate(s)
present
a high
degree
of
similarity
with
the
vector,
or which
candidates present
similar
facial characteristics
to
those
of
the
vector,
This result
is
further
communicated
to
the
relevant
law
enforcement partner who
can
further
conduct
specific
enquiries
to
establish
if
the
persons
depicted in
the
vector
and
the
candidate(s)
images
are either
the
same
or
the different
person(s),
5.
How
is
the
balance between
the
needs
of
the
investigation
and
the
respect
of the involved child's
right
to
be
forgotten,
i.e.
the
possibility
of
obtaining
the
immediate removal
of content
that
could
jeopardize
his
dignity?
Europol's reply:
The
removal
of
child
sexual abuse
material
(CSAM)
from
the
internet
is
a
necessary
step
to
prevent
the
re-victimization of
the victim,
It
is
very
often
one
of
the
initial
steps of
the
investigative
process
aiming
at
the
identification
of
the victim
and
the
arrest
of
the
offender.
Europol
is not directly
involved
in the
removal
process,
as
it
falls
under
the
competence
of the
national
authorities,
Nevertheless,
the
processing
of
the
CSAM
contributed
by
the
Member
States
in
the
frame
of their
investigations follows
the
procedures
REU, Alm.del - 2019-20 - Bilag 520: Europols svar på spm. stillet af medlemmer af Europa Parlamentet og nationale parlamenter i JPSG
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Europol
Public
lnformation
established
in Article 28 of
the
Europol
Regulation, protecting
the
rights
of
the
data subjects
concerned
by
introducing
the
necessary
data
protection
safeguards.
The
removal
of
personal
data
from
Europol
systems, including
facial-
biometric,
is specifically
controlled
by
the
Europol Regulation.
The
possibility
to
review
personal
data or
to
request
to
know
what
personal
data is held
by
Europol
in
regard
to
any
individual
is
open
to
the
individual
citizens
themselves,
subject
to
certain
conditions,
through
the
Europol
Regulationl.
Child
sexual abuse
material
involves special
categories
of
personal data including
sex
life
information,
which
is
particularly
sensitive
and
has
direct impact
on
the dignity
of those
victims.
CSAM
often
continues
to
be
shared amongst
paedophiles
via
online environments also as regards
cases
that
were already investigated by
law
enforcement
authorities.
The re-sharing
of
already known
CSAM
leads
to
the
re-victimisation
of
concerned
data
subjects
but
also
to
additional
investigations
in
order
to
identify
those
redistributing incriminated
material.
Furthermore,
law
enforcement
operations may
attempt
to
rescue minors
from
on-going
sexual abuse while
the
reality might
be
that the
same
child
has
in fact
already been
identified
(and ideally
rescued)
during an earlier law
enforcement operation.
Against
this
background,
in
some
cases,
CSAM
is
not
being
directly
deleted
from
Europol databases
after
closure
of
a certain
judicial
case
but
being
retained
in
order
to
enable building
on
already
existing related criminal
intelligence
and
to
prevent
later
investment
of
law
enforcement
efforts into
cases which
may already
(partly)
have
been
solved,
within
the
limits
of
Europol
legal
framework,
The
purpose
of
the
database
storing
the
images extracted
from
the
contributions
to
Europol
is
to
enable
the
identification
of
children and
their
abusers,
The
database
was created
and
is
maintained
in a
separated environment
without
access
to
the
internet
or
linking
to
other databases.
The
right
of
the
child
to
be
forgotten, where
necessary,
is
assured
through
the
existing
Europol regulation
and
the
provisions
in
it
regarding
the
retention of
personal
data
on
individuals. Special
data retention
rules apply
to
data
related
to
victims
of a
criminal
offence
or
persons
under
the
age
of
18.
Furthermore,
CSAM
is
subject
to
regular
data
retention related reviews
in
order
to
determine
the
continued
necessity
of
processing
at
least every
three
years,
Any
potential
data subject
access
request
and
any
potential
subsequent
request
for
erasure
of
personal
data by
a
concerned
data subject would
be
duly
scrutinised
taking into
account
the
operational
interest
and
-
very
importantly
-
the
interest
of
the
individual
concerned.
1
Arti.l.
37(21
ot
the
Europol Regulation stipulates
that
any
data subject
having
accessed
personal
data
concerning
him
or
her
processed
by Europol in accordance
with
Article
36
shall
have
the right
to
request Europol, through the
authority
appointed
for that
purpose
in
the
Member State of
his
or
her
choice,
to
erase
personal data relating
to
him or her held by Europol
if
they are no longer
required
for the
purposes
for which they
are collected
or
are
further
processed. That
authority
shall
refer
the
request
to
Europol
without
delay and in
any case
within
one
month of
receipt.
REU, Alm.del - 2019-20 - Bilag 520: Europols svar på spm. stillet af medlemmer af Europa Parlamentet og nationale parlamenter i JPSG
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Europol
Public
lnformation
Written
question
by
MEP
Patrick
Breyer
1
How
many and
which hosting service
providers
(please
list
names) are
systematically
or
mostly refusing
to
remove
terrorist
content referred
to
them by
or
via
Europol?
Europol's reply:
The role
of
Europol's EU
Internet
Referral
Unit
(EU
IRU)
is
to
support
companies
in
reducing accessibility
to
terrorist
content online,
in
voluntary
cooperation
with the
tech
industry.
Since
20L5,
the
EU
IRU
has
detected
terrorist
content on around 360 platforms globally,
The
first
outreach
to
the
affected Online Service Providers
(OSPs)
is
launched
in
the
context
of
the
referral
process.
The referral
activity
(meaning
the
reporting of
terrorist
and
extremist
online content
to
the
concerned
online service
provider)
does
not
constitute
an
enforceable
act,
Thus,
the
decision
and
removal
of
referred/identified
terrorist
and extremist online content
is
taken
by
the
concerned
service provider under
its
own
responsibility
and
accountability
based on
the companies'terms
of
reference.
Whilst
Europol
is not in
a
position
to
provide
operational
details
on
OSPs'
responses
to
referrals,
it
should
be
stressed
that the
EU
IRU
enhances
its
support
to
the
affected
OSPs
with
a
combination
of
actions
that
go
beyond
the
referral
process.
The
EU
IRU engages
with
OSPs
to
share best
practices
on
the
pro-active detection
of terrorist
content and informs
OSPs
how
their
services
are
being abused
and by whom.
It
also provides law
enforcement
expertise
on
trends
and methods used
by
terrorist
organisations or examples
of
pro-active
measures
that
could
be
implemented
to
improve
resilience.
The
combination
of
referral
requests
and
the
above
mentioned
actions
is
tailored to
the
type
of
services
that
each
online
platform
offers
and
the
degree
of
their
capability
for
cooperation. The companies'
responses
vary,
depending
on
their
size,
financial
and
human
resources,
extent of
abuse by
terrorists
or
technical capabilities.
Whilst
some
companies
would
implement
technical
solutions
to
optimise
the
referral
process
or
invest
in
moderation
teams,
others would focus mostly on pro-active detection
or
apply a combination of
techniques,
such
as
geo-blocking of
terrorist
content or
"login
pages.
Based
on
the
measures
set out
above,
the
EU
IRU
has
an
excellent track
record
of
building, over
time,
trust-based and sustainable relationships
with
relevant
online
platforms, In
the
EU
IRU's
experience,
it
is
vital
to
understand
the culture, set-up
and
limits
of
OSPs
to
ensure law enforcement's
outreach
is appropriately
measured,
Through
its work
as
a
key stakeholder in
the
EU
Internet
Forum and outreach
efforts
with
NGOs
like
Tech
Against
Terrorism
and
co-chairing
Global
Internet
Forum
to
Counter
Terrorism
Working
Groups,
EU
IRU
aims
to
continue
to
be
an
approachable
and effective
resource
to
facilitate
Member
State investigations and
referrals.
REU, Alm.del - 2019-20 - Bilag 520: Europols svar på spm. stillet af medlemmer af Europa Parlamentet og nationale parlamenter i JPSG
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Europol
Public
lnformation
2
For each
year
since
2075,
how many
pieces
of
terrorist content
did
the Europol
Internet
Referral Unit
refer to
online
platforms for removal
(please answer
separately for
each
year)?
Europol's replv:
Contributed number
of
items
for
referra
I
20162
20059
2017
24247
37835
2018
20L9
2020
(Q1)
25086
5514
For each
year
since
2075, how often did national authorities
refer
terrorist
content to
online
platforms
via
the
EU
IRU technical solution
(please answer
separately for
each
year
and
each
participating
Member
State)?
3.
Europol's reply:
number
of
MS
number
of
items
for
referral
via
the
EU
IRU
technical solution
2015
1
119
20L6
20L7
2018
20L9
2020
8
7
20tL
3647
9
11
7
7L352
t37046
L5496
2The
figure
represents
the
numberfrom
Jul
2015 (establishment
of
EU
IRU)
until
Dec 2016.
REU, Alm.del - 2019-20 - Bilag 520: Europols svar på spm. stillet af medlemmer af Europa Parlamentet og nationale parlamenter i JPSG
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Europol
Public
Information
hope
that
these
answers
will
prove satisfactory.
Europol
remains
availabl
for further
clarifications
Yours sincerely,
I
Ju
er
Executive
Director of
Governance
REU, Alm.del - 2019-20 - Bilag 520: Europols svar på spm. stillet af medlemmer af Europa Parlamentet og nationale parlamenter i JPSG
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