UtakataNoAnnex
Senior Member
Rebranding the name to "Creepoid Fairview" is the only thing appropriate here. /bleh
I have heard of this technology being used to gather demographic data (using image recognition to classify people by age, sex, etc.). I'm rather surprised that a solution provider would make a solution that violates privacy laws as compliance is a pretty high priority for large corporate customers (no one wants to be the CEO for another Target CC leak, etc.).
My internet doesn't read my face though.As long as there is care not to track or identify individuals, I don't have any objection to using facial recognition to gather demo data or understand consumer behaviour (ie, tracking a 'session' of where a person went during a visit). If anyone objects to this, I assume they don't use the internet, which offers much more opportunity for fine grain identification of individuals, and their behaviours and thoughts.
It knows exactly who you are, where you live, what you like (both publicly and privately), your age, gender, political orientation, sexual orientation, relationship status, etc. etc. etc. And it has your face (courtesy facebook etc.).My internet doesn't read my face though.
And then thanks to Clearview AI, they sell it to the police!It knows exactly who you are, where you live, what you like (both publicly and privately), your age, gender, political orientation, sexual orientation, relationship status, etc. etc. etc. And it has your face (courtesy facebook etc.).
It knows exactly who you are, where you live, what you like (both publicly and privately), your age, gender, political orientation, sexual orientation, relationship status, etc. etc. etc. And it has your face (courtesy facebook etc.).
So what? That doesn't prove a thing...other than conflating 2 different subject matters that have really nothing to do with each other. CF where caught doing something illegal with face recognition technology. Versus the internet still can't read my face (no matter what can be found about me or anyone). So I am not seeing the point here. And I certainly hope this isn't some convoluted attempt to defend the indefensible here.It knows exactly who you are, where you live, what you like (both publicly and privately), your age, gender, political orientation, sexual orientation, relationship status, etc. etc. etc. And it has your face (courtesy facebook etc.).
"Shoppers had no reason to expect their image was being collected by an inconspicuous camera, or that it would be used, with facial recognition technology, for analysis"
What century do they think we live in?
There is no perfectly effective way to maintain your privacy online. You can definitely reduce how many fingerprints you're leaving. But, you buy stuff on Amazon, right? You signed up for this forum, right?
Most people use these services and have come to terms with the privacy trade-offs. There is no need to step in a mall, just like there is no need to sign up for a Google account. My point is that worrying about a mall guessing your age and sex based on your image and using this aggregate traffic demographic data to use as a pitch for potential tenants seems like a pretty minor invasion of privacy compared to how laid bare people are on the web.
One with privacy laws that explicitly require opt-in consent for the use of this technology? That is what the ruling says.