The Jack Bauers of Europe love facial recognition: opinion


  • TECH
  • Thursday, 12 Sep 2019

An CCTV camera on a wall in King's Cross, London. One review of facial-recognition trials by London police found that 63.6%, or almost two-thirds, of computer-generated matches deemed credible by a human operator turned out to be incorrect. — AFP

Facial recognition has friends in Europe. Live trials of real-time face-tracking have taken place over the past year in countries such as the UK and France, by and large without falling foul of the continent’s sweeping but haphazardly-enforced data protection laws.

This should be a wake-up call for regulators to act. But the trials also offer a taste of the public-safety argument which will be trotted out to defend this intrusive, flawed technology, glamorised by TV shows like 24 to solve fictional terrorist plots.

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tech News

Shein falls under tough EU online content rules as user numbers jump
Google parent Alphabet reclaims spot in $2 trillion valuation club
India's HCLTech misses Q4 revenue estimates
Chipmaker Intel falls as AI competition hurts forecast
Russia's Yandex reports Q1 revenue rise as market awaits spin-off news
Japan to levy big fines with new app rules
Inside Big Tech’s underground race to buy AI training data
Facebook scams demand stricter online rules, Japan lawmaker says
A Chinese firm is America’s favourite drone maker – except in Washington
Snapchat parent soars after beating revenue, user growth estimates

Others Also Read