Facial recognition protesters put smartphones on their heads to scan the faces of 13,000 Washington DC inhabitants
Fight for the Future
- Three activists wandered around busy spots in Washington DC on Thursday using cameraphones to run people's faces through facial recognition software in protest against growing use of the technology.
- The software they used was Rekognition, Amazon's commercially available and sometimes controversial facial recognition tool.
- The protesters collected 13,740 face scans, including one congressman.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
Protesters against facial recognition donned white hazmat suits and cameras to collect face scans of more than 13,000 people.
Activists from Fight for the Future mounted the protest in Washington DC on Thursday.See the rest of the story at Business Insider
See Also:
- Big streaming companies like Netflix and HBO are looking to crack down on freeloaders who use other people's passwords and accounts
- Jeff Bezos is reportedly keen on buying an NFL team
- Amazon's wildly popular video game streaming service, Twitch, is bleeding: These are all the stars who have left for competing services
Comments
Post a Comment