The Chronicle

Tech potential creepy

Facebook plans to spy on you with your camera

- MARGI MURPHY

FACEBOOK has been secretly developing creepy technology which spies on people and automatica­lly analyses their facial expression­s.

The social network applied for a patent to capture pictures of a user through their smartphone.

The creepy designs, which date back to 2015, were discovered by software company CBI Insight, which has been analysing Mark Zuckerberg’s “emotion technology”.

Patent documents contain illustrati­ons showing a person holding a smartphone with a camera taking a picture from which “emotion characteri­stics” like smiling or frowning are detected.

If the person appears to like what they’re seeing, Facebook could place more of the same type of content in front of them.

Patents don’t always make it through to the end product – so it’s not clear whether Facebook will bring out this new feature.

Researcher­s at CBI Insights warned that the plans could put a lot of people off using the service.

“On the one hand, they want to identify which content is most engaging and respond to audience’s reactions, on the other emotion-detection is technicall­y difficult, not to mention a PR and ethical minefield,” it wrote in a blogpost. But that’s not all. Facebook appears to have tested similar technology to work out which emoji to send to people using a selfie.

If you’re smiling, it could automatica­lly send a smiley face and vice versa.

Its most recent emotional patent, which was granted on May 25 this year, aims to tackle a dilemma many of us will have faced.

It can be difficult to make your text messages come across exactly as you mean them to, and sarcasm or jokes are often lost in translatio­n – leading to some awkward conversati­ons.

A new tool lets the social network give your texts more feeling so they won’t be misconstru­ed.

The system picks up data from the keyboard, mouse, touchpad, touchscree­n to detect typing speed and how hard the keys are pressed.

Facebook will accordingl­y change the text font and size, before shaping to make it more emotive and relevant to your mood.

Facebook said it did not offer tools to detect emotion.

If you want to check what Facebook sees and shares about you, check out its privacy policy.

 ?? PHOTO: THINKSTOCK ?? CLOSE EYE: Facebook applied for a patent to capture pictures of a user through their smartphone.
PHOTO: THINKSTOCK CLOSE EYE: Facebook applied for a patent to capture pictures of a user through their smartphone.

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