Taxpayers seeking access to some information about their taxes will be required to submit to facial recognition software, a move that has raised privacy concerns:
to see their past returns or get information about child tax credit payments.
The IRS says because of a lack of resources, it contracted out the identity verification to a Virginia-based company called ID.me. That is where taxpayers would have submitted their photos to, and that is where the photos would have been kept. And its widespread use is part of the problem for privacy advocates like Scott."You no longer have control over identity," Scott says."And when that infrastructure is in place, it just takes, you know, a few bad actors to really kind of muck things up."
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