One of the features that was added to the technology mix during the period between the purchase of my old phone and the purchase of my new iPhone is facial recognition software. During the set-up process at the Verizon store, I held the iPhone as if I were looking at messages, moved my head from side to side and up and down until the phone had acquired about a 270-degree look at my head and indicated that it had seen enough, and the facial recognition feature was activated.
Now, whenever I pick up the phone, the software kicks in automatically and substitutes for the entry of passcodes. It’s pretty amazing technology, really, and it’s a lot faster and less clumsy than the passcode-entry process. I really like the convenience element.
But . . . as a result of this Apple has got my face memorized and digitized and stored somewhere. And, the modern tech sector world of information-selling and data-trading being what it is, who knows who else now has the capability to instantaneously identify my less-than-noble features. My cell phone service provider? Every Apple subsidiary and affiliate and technology partner? The FBI, the CIA, or the Department of Homeland Security, or some Russian or Chinese hackers?
Recently San Francisco passed a ban on the use of facial recognition software by police and other agencies, and other cities are considering similar legislation. The proponents of such measures tout them as a victory for privacy and a safeguard against governmental overreach that could conceivably allow governmental agencies to track citizens as they go about their daily lives. Opponents note that facial recognition software can help the authorities solve crimes — as the article notes, the technology was used to identify a mass shooting suspect last year — and that it can help to secure our borders and airports.
I’ve long since concluded that while privacy is nice, in the modern world you have to make countless choices that can affect your privacy in different ways. Do you pay with a credit card that tracks your purchases, or cash? Do you use a cell phone that keeps track of your location? Do you participate in social media and share some of your life through Facebook, Twitter, and the countless other outlets? Have you traveled outside of the U.S. recently and returned to the country using one of those passport and facial scanning re-entry terminals? It’s hard to argue, too, that a face that you show to the world each day, that appears on your driver’s license, and that is captured regularly by the various surveillance cameras positioned throughout American society, is something that is extraordinarily private.
All things considered, I’m not too troubled by the use of facial recognition software. It’s the protection of other highly personal information — such as health information and financial information — that is of much more concern to me.
like you, I have mixed feelings about this. I know it is easier and the way of the future, but also fear some loss of personal privacy
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