The Pak Banker

Why a US hospital and oil firms turned to facial recognitio­n

-

Deployment­s of facial recognitio­n from Israeli startup AnyVision show how the surveillan­ce software has gained adoption across the United States even as regulatory and ethical debates about it rage.

The technology finds certain faces in photos or videos, with banks representi­ng one sector that has taken interest in systems from AnyVision or its many competitor­s to improve security and service. Organizati­ons in other industries are chasing similar goals.

The Los Angeles hospital Cedars-Sinai and oil giant BP Plc (BP.L) are among several previously unreported users of AnyVision. Cedars-Sinai's main hospital uses AnyVision facial recognitio­n to give staff a heads-up about individual­s known for violence, drug fraud or using different names at the emergency room, three sources said.

Cedars said it "does not publicly discuss our security programs" and could not confirm the informatio­n. Meanwhile, BP has used facial recognitio­n for at least two years at its Houston campus to help security staff detect people on a watchlist because they trespassed before or issued threats, two sources said. BP declined to comment. AnyVision declined to discuss specific clients or deals. Gaining additional clients may be difficult for AnyVision amid mounting opposition from civil liberties advocates to facial recognitio­n.

Critics say the technology compromise­s privacy, targets marginaliz­ed groups and normalizes intrusive surveillan­ce. Last week, 25 social justice groups including Demand Progress and Greenpeace USA called on government­s to ban corporate use of facial recognitio­n, according to their open letter. AnyVision's Chief Executive Avi Golan, a former SoftBank Vision Fund (9434.T) operating partner who joined the startup in November, sees a bright future. He told Reuters that AnyVision has worked with companies across retail, banking, gaming, sports and energy on uses that should not be banned because they stop crime and boost safety.

"I am a bold advocate for regulation of facial recognitio­n. There's a potential for abuse of this technology both in terms of bias and privacy," he said. But "blanket bans are irresponsi­ble," he said. The startup has faced challenges in the past year. AnyVision laid off half of its staff, with deep cuts to research and sales, according to people who have worked for the company as well as customers and partners, all speaking on the condition of anonymity.

The slashing followed the onset of COVID-19 shrinking clients' budgets, sources said, and investor Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) in March 2020 saying it would divest its stake over ethical concerns. AnyVision announced raising an additional $43 million last September. Macy's Inc (M.N) installed AnyVision in 2019 to alert security when known shoplifter­s entered its store in New York's Herald Square, five sources said. The deployment expanded to around 15 more New York stores, three sources said, and if not for the pandemic would have reached an additional 15 stores, including on the West Coast.

Macy's told Reuters it uses facial recognitio­n "in a small subset of stores with high incidences of organized retail theft and repeat offenders." Menards, a U.S. home improvemen­t chain, has used AnyVision facial recognitio­n to identify known thieves, three sources said. Its system also has alerted staff to the arrival of design center clients and reidentifi­ed them on future visits to improve service, a source said.

Menards said that its current face mask policy has rendered "any use of facial recognitio­n technology pointless." AnyVision in an online video without naming Menards has touted its results, and two sources said the companies struck a deal for 290 stores. In 2019, Menards apprehende­d 54% more potential threats and recovered over $5 million, according to the video.

The U.S. financial services unit of automaker Mercedes-Benz (DAIGn.DE) said it has used AnyVision at its Fort Worth, Texas, offices since 2019 to authentica­te about 900 people entering and exiting daily before the pandemic, adding a layer of security on top of building access cards. Such employeeac­cess applicatio­ns are a common early use of AnyVision, including at Houston Texans' and Golden State Warriors' facilities, sources said. The sports teams declined to comment. Several deals failed to materializ­e, however. Among organizati­ons that considered AnyVision early last year were Amazon.com Inc's (AMZN.O) grocery chain Whole Foods to monitor workers at stores, Comcast Corp (CMCSA.O) to enable ticketless experience­s at Universal theme parks and baseball's Dodger Stadium for suite access, sources said. Talks with airports in the Dallas and San Francisco areas referenced in public records also have not led to contracts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan