I have read in the privacy community that facial recognition done in public places is considered problematic. Not knowing what is considered the crux of the matter, I have to ask about some facial and behavioral recognition use cases here, and whether they are a problem or not

  • Digital signage on roads, cameras in stores, etc. read pedestrians’ faces, movements, etc. and infer attributes for marketing purposes (sometimes the inferred attributes are stored as is, sometimes they are stored as statistics and the attributes themselves are removed)
  • Public transit agencies can share police databases to identify and track individuals with arrest records
  • Public agencies use facial and behavioral recognition to determine and track suspicious persons. The information read is stored.
  • @GenkiFeral
    link
    32 years ago

    When the government becomes oppressive, changes laws to draconian ones, can find you ANYWHERE through a digital wallet that uses a digital ID, FIDO, and CBDCs, so can shut off your access to ANYTHING and EVERYTHING if you donate money to the ‘wrong’ cause or say the ‘wrong’ thing or fail to comply with some new law/rule/mandate that you find unethical and over the line.