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 NEWS & UPDATES

Google Picked a Side – And It’s Not Ours

11/18/2025

 
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​Once upon a time, in Google’s 2004 IPO filing, it aspired to “Don’t Be Evil,” imagining itself a company “that does good things for the world.”

Dateline, November 2025: Various outlets have reported that Google’s app store now includes a version of its Mobile Identify app for Customs and Border Protection. This version is tailored to state and local law enforcement officers who are deputized to work with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) by using facial recognition to scan people using facial recognition algorithms. If a match is found on federal databases, officials at ICE are notified. And those databases (at least the ones we know of) contain records on more than 270 million people.

Odds are you and your loved ones are in those databases.

The fact that the law enforcement officers who use Mobile Identify are deputized to work alongside ICE is beside the point, as is the fact that ICE has its own, presumably more powerful version of the same app, called Mobile Fortify.

Of far greater concern is that any government agency possesses this ability. It’s easily shared across jurisdictions and Google seems to have no qualms about enabling a tool that could be deployed as a weapon to surveil American citizens at will.

After all, Google’s leaders could’ve just said “no.” But they didn’t, and now an insidious new public-private partnership is afoot. Today, it’s Google and ICE and the issue is immigration enforcement, but don’t expect it to stay that way for long. These kinds of surveillance technologies never stay contained, nor do limitations on who they target. Soon it will be Google and the government – federal, state, county, and local – and the reasons for spying on us could be our religion, political party, ethnicity, affiliation, or – well, you name it.
​
Mobile Identify is just one more reason why Congress must debate how federal agencies are accessing our private information without a warrant. This is something to keep in mind when FISA Section 702, a federal surveillance policy, comes up for reauthorization in April.

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