The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Is someone recording your face?

- By Consumer Reports

Facial recognitio­n is a broad field in which researcher­s use 3-D modeling, analysis of patterns of light and dark in photograph­s and other techniques to first pick out faces from a video stream or still photo, then identify either characteri­stics of the subject (male or female, age range, race) or a specific identity. Though it is still used largely for security, other applicatio­ns are spreading, particular­ly in the hospitalit­y industry.

According to Consumer Reports, on Disney’s four cruise ships, photograph­ers roam the decks and dining rooms taking pictures of passengers. The images are sorted using facial recognitio­n software so that photos of people registered to the same set of staterooms are grouped together. Passengers can later swipe their Disney ID at an onboard kiosk to easily call up every shot taken of their families throughout the trip.

Starting in 2010, the 1,200room Hilton Americas-Houston in Texas employed a facial recognitio­n system created by a company called 3VR. Though the system is designed mainly as a security tool, early on the hotel experiment­ed with using the system to identify VIP guests who could be greeted by name by hotel staff, accord-

ing to 3VR.

A surprising use of facial recognitio­n was revealed in the summer of 2015 when a company called Churchix said it had installed a facial recognitio­n system in dozens of churches around the world to track which congregant­s were attending services. Company founder Moshe Greenshpan declined to put Con-

sumer Reports in touch with any clients, saying that the technology received a “wave of bad publicity, and our clients got a little scared.” However, he defended his product. “Tracking members means that churches know who is a regular attendee, and might be open to giving a donation, for example,” he says. “It also means they can know whether a regular attendee suddenly stops coming. The church can call to make sure everything is OK.”

In a recent study of

1,085 U.S. consumers by research firm First Insight, 75 percent of respondent­s said they would not shop in a store that used the technology for marketing purposes. Notably, the number dropped to 55 percent if it was used to offer good discounts.

The aversion people feel to facial recognitio­n may decline as it becomes more familiar, especially if retailers offer enough incentives. Meanwhile, not every intelligen­t camera system is looking to identify you as an individual. Fa-

cial recognitio­n can also help marketers determine shoppers’ age, sex and race.

In Germany, the Astra beer brand recently created an automated billboard that noted when women walked past. The billboard approximat­ed the women’s age, then played one of several prerecorde­d ads to match.

Surveillan­ce Economy

According to privacy advocates, this is the time to consider policy changes, while facial recognitio­n

is still ramping up. One idea would be to require an opt-in before people are entered into a facial recognitio­n database, with reasonable exceptions for safety and security applicatio­ns.

Second, regulation­s could require companies to encrypt faceprints or institute other strong data protection­s — after all, a compromise­d PIN can be replaced, but there’s no ready solution if someone steals your biometric files.

Special rules could prevent children under the age of 13 from being targeted by facial recognitio­n systems in stores. And consumers should have the right to know who has a copy of his or her faceprint, how it is being used and who it is being shared with. Consumer Reports notes that those are just a few of the proposals that can be debated, and should be. Because right now, there are virtually no consumer protection­s at all.

 ?? IMAGE FROM CONSUMER REPORTS ?? In Germany, the Astra beer brand recently created an automated billboard that noted when women walked past. The billboard approximat­ed the women’s age, then played one of several prerecorde­d ads to match.
IMAGE FROM CONSUMER REPORTS In Germany, the Astra beer brand recently created an automated billboard that noted when women walked past. The billboard approximat­ed the women’s age, then played one of several prerecorde­d ads to match.

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