Shoppers falsely identified by facial recognition system
15 hours ago
- #privacy_concerns
- #facial_recognition
- #retail_crime
- Ian Clayton was wrongly flagged by Facewatch in a Home Bargains store, leading to his ejection without explanation and later discovered it was a case of misidentification from a previous incident.
- Facewatch, used by retailers like B&M and Sports Direct, claims 99.98% accuracy but has led to false identifications, with victims like Warren Rajah and Jennie Sanders experiencing embarrassment and lack of recourse.
- Critics highlight civil rights concerns, racial and gender biases in facial recognition, and inadequate oversight, with complaints to the Information Commissioner's Office often going unanswered.
- Companies issued apologies and vouchers as goodwill gestures, but victims declined or felt unsatisfied, emphasizing issues of privacy and the 'guilty until proven innocent' experience.
- Regulatory gaps and slow response from watchdogs like the ICO are criticized, while Facewatch attributes errors to human processes rather than technology failures.