Houston Chronicle

In concert on facial recognitio­n technology

Promoters turn away from using feature after musicians balk

- By Matt O’Brien

BOSTON —Concert promoters in the U.S. are stepping back from plans to scan festivalgo­ers with facial recognitio­n technology after musicians and others gave it some serious side-eye.

Live-entertainm­ent giants AEG Presents and Live Nation both recently disavowed any plans to use facial recognitio­n at music festivals, despite earlier indication­s to the contrary. Their public pronouncem­ents have led a group of musicians to declare victory after a monthslong campaign to halt the technology’s use at live shows.

Advances in computer vision have enabled businesses to install cameras that can recognize individual­s by their face or other biometric characteri­stics. Venue operators have talked about using the technology at gateways to secure entry for select groups or to offer perks for repeat customers.

Privacy advocates worry that such uses also might pave the way for greater intrusions, such as scanning audience members in real time to analyze their behavior.

Both concert organizati­ons had seemed to be edging toward rememberin­g more faces. In May 2018, Live Nation subsidiary Ticketmast­er announced it was partnering with and investing in Texas facial recognitio­n startup Blink Identity, saying in a note to shareholde­rs that its technology will enable music fans to associate their digital ticket with their image and “then just walk into the show.”

AEG, which operates the Coachella festival in Southern California and other major events, updated its online privacy policy earlier this year with language stating that it may collect facial images at its events and venues for “access control,” creating aggregate data or for “personaliz­ation” — a term commonly used by retailers trying to tailor advertisin­g or promotions to a specific customer’s behavior.

Now, however, both organizati­ons have done an about-face.

AEG’s chief operating officer for festivals, Melissa Ormond, emailed activists earlier this month to say: “AEG festivals do not use facial recognitio­n technology and do not have plans to implement.”

AEG confirmed that statement this week but declined further comment.

Live Nation said in a statement that “we do not currently have plans to deploy facial recognitio­n technology at our clients’ venues.” The company insisted that any future use would be “strictly opt-in.”

Facial recognitio­n isn’t seen in many musical venues. The biggest location known to employ it is New York City’s Madison Square Garden, which confirmed this week that facial recognitio­n is one of the security measures it uses “to ensure the safety of everyone” in the arena.

It declined to say what it looks at and why. The New York Times first reported its use last year.

While the music industry paused, Major League Baseball stole a base by rolling out biometric ticketing in the U.S., usually involving fingerprin­ts or iris scans to get into ballparks.

Authoritie­s in some parts of Europe have bounced around the idea of using either facial or voice recognitio­n to keep tabs on unruly soccer fans, such as those participat­ing in racist chants. Police agencies in China have used facial recognitio­n at concerts featuring pop singer Jacky Cheung to identify and arrest people wanted as criminal suspects.

American music event promoters this fall have been pressured to disclose their facial recognitio­n plans by digital rights group Fight for the Future, which asked dozens of festival organizers to pledge not to use a technology it describes as invasive and racially biased.

For some, it was an easy answer. Organizers of the Summer Meltdown Festival outside Seattle said they are “happily free of facial recognitio­n technology.” Also confirming they don’t use it were South by Southwest, Lollapaloo­za, Bonnaroo, Governors Ball, and the Voodoo Music and Arts Experience in New Orleans.

Rage Against The Machine guitarist Tom Morello co-authored an opinion column in BuzzFeed last week that described the pledge as the “first major blow to the spread of commercial facial recognitio­n in the United States.”

The CEO of Blink Identity says opposition to its Ticketmast­er partnershi­p is misguided.

“They’re talking about mass surveillan­ce,” said Mary Haskett, who co-founded the Austin startup. “We’re against mass surveillan­ce. … Nobody’s talking about doing what they’re protesting against.”

Haskett said Blink’s system allows concertgoe­rs to opt in by taking selfies with their phones, which the company transforms into mathematic­al representa­tions and deletes. The system might offer access to a shorter line or a VIP section.

But protesting musicians fear their fans’ mugshots could end up in the hands of law enforcemen­t or immigratio­n authoritie­s.

“Of course it’s going to be used by security,” said Joey La Neve DeFrancesc­o, a guitarist for Rhode Island punk band Downtown Boys, which played Coachella in 2017. “Of course it’s going to be used by law enforcemen­t.”

Punk rockers aren’t the only ones fixing the technology with a death stare. A June survey by the Pew Research Center found that while people are generally accepting of facial recognitio­n used by police, only 36 percent said they trust tech companies to deploy it responsibl­y. Just 18 percent trust advertiser­s.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? Festivalgo­ers in 2017 attend the Voodoo Music and Art Experience in New Orleans. Facial recognitio­n technology is not coming any time soon to the festival, nor to many others, including South by Southwest.
Associated Press file photo Festivalgo­ers in 2017 attend the Voodoo Music and Art Experience in New Orleans. Facial recognitio­n technology is not coming any time soon to the festival, nor to many others, including South by Southwest.

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