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Above The Noise | Is Facial Recognition Invading Your Privacy? @AboveTheNoise | Uploaded 6 years ago | Updated 1 hour ago
In today’s digital world, privacy is something that is getting harder and harder to protect. But what if simply scanning your face provides enough information to track you and learn your habits?

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Facial recognition is creeping more and more into our daily lives. Facebook and Google use it for autotagging photos. Snapchat uses it to create hilarious filters. And Apple’s new iPhone will allow you to use your face to unlock your phone. But this same technology can be used by governments and companies to learn as much as they can about you.

Governments and law enforcement are using facial recognition right now. In the US, there are an estimated 60 million surveillance cameras, meaning there’s a pretty good chance that our faces are being digitally captured every day. In US airports, facial scans are checked against photos stored in police databases. In fact, if you’re an adult in the US, there is a 50/50 chance that your photo is stored in a police database, even if you’ve never been arrested or charged with a crime.

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Facial recognition is also about making money. When you and your friends are auto-tagged when you upload a photo to Google or Facebook, that’s one more data point that companies can use to track what you do online, what you like, and what you buy. Companies are willing to pay BIG money for this info.

What is facial recognition?
A biometric method of identifying an individual by comparing a digital image data with the stored record for that person.

SOURCES:
Facial recognition is increasingly common, but how does it work?
salon.com/2017/04/22/facial-recognition-is-increasingly-common-but-how-does-it-work_partner

Facial Recognition May Boost Airport Security But Raises Privacy Worries
npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2017/06/26/534131967/facial-recognition-may-boost-airport-security-but-raises-privacy-worries

Half of All American Adults are in a Police Face Recognition Database
https://www.law.georgetown.edu/news/press-releases/half-of-all-american-adults-are-in-a-police-face-recognition-database-new-report-finds.cfm

China Shames Jaywalkers Through Facial Recognition
phys.org/news/2017-06-china-shames-jaywalkers-facial-recognition.html

Moscow Deploys Facial Recognition to Spy on Citizens in Streets
bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-09-28/moscow-deploys-facial-recognition-to-spy-on-citizens-in-streets

Disguised Face Identification (DFI) with Facial KeyPoints using Spatial Fusion Convolutional Network
arxiv.org/pdf/1708.09317v1.pdf

Facebook and Google predicted to make $106 billion from advertising
cnbc.com/2017/03/21/facebook-and-google-ad-youtube-make-advertising-in-2017.html

Walmart's Facial Recognition Tech Would Overstep Boundaries
forbes.com/sites/retailwire/2017/07/27/walmarts-facial-recognition-tech-would-overstep-boundaries/#473627c745f8

Facial Recognition Technology Is Big Business — And It's Coming For You
news.vice.com/article/facial-recognition-technology-is-big-business-and-its-coming-for-you

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Is Facial Recognition Invading Your Privacy? @AboveTheNoise

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