Apply enough pressure, and even Facebook will buckle.
The tech giant, which recently rebranded as Meta, announced Tuesday that it intends to disable Facebook's facial recognition features. While a massive win for privacy activists and users, the move is a limited one that does not preclude the company from using future forms of facial recognition tech on its billions of users.
"We're shutting down the Face Recognition system on Facebook," reads the blog post — careful to make the distinction that this change is coming to the Facebook service, not the parent company Meta. "People who've opted in will no longer be automatically recognized in photos and videos and we will delete more than a billion people's individual facial recognition templates."
In other words, Meta (née Facebook) is leaving the door open to use facial recognition tech on its other many services like Instagram, WhatsApp, and everything to do with virtual reality and the company's version of the metaverse.
"We will continue working on these technologies and engaging outside experts," continues the blog post by Jerome Pesenti, Meta's VP of Artificial Intelligence.
Consider yourself warned, in other words. It is worth celebrating the — albeit limited — win for privacy, however. As part of the announcement, Meta confirmed that it "will delete the facial recognition template used to identify" users.
"This is great news for Facebook users," wrote the Electronic Frontier Foundation in response to the news, "and for the global movement pushing back on this technology."
Meta's decision did not come in a vacuum. Facebook has faced pressure to rein in facial recognition tech from lawmakers, courts, and privacy activists across the world — something the name change to Meta was not likely to alleviate.
SEE ALSO: Federal study confirms facial recognition is a biased mess
In 2020, cities across the country passed various bans on the use of facial recognition tech. With documented cases of faulty facial recognition technology leading to false arrests and imprisonment, the movement against it was likely to gain steam.
Meta, in other words, saw which way the wind was blowing and decided to get ahead of it while leaving its options open for future. So don't applaud the Mark Zuckerberg for doing the right thing — thank the activists and lawmakers who pressured him to do it.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Facebook makes big show of kinda ending facial recognition-口沸目赤网
sitemap
文章
4
浏览
27968
获赞
73
This alignment test will tell you if you're a stupid horny baby
People online love a good alignment test. They also love to say "I'm baby." Here's something that coThe planets Venus and Mars are amazing in June, and you should look up
It's a superb time to view our quirky planetary neighbors Venus and Mars.June 2023 brings a number oNASA dropped a new report. It's a wake
Consequences, they say, collect in low places. A new NASA analysis, using data collected from differYouTube cofounder protests decision to remove 'dislikes'
When YouTube announced it was removingthe "dislike" count from all videos on its platform last week,Mia Farrow's Twitter account is joyfully bizarre
Stream of consciousness writing made for great 20th century fiction, and now it's coming for 21st ceSamsung brags about remotely disabling 'looted' smart TVs
When it comes to so-called smart gadgets, owning just isn't what it used to be.Samsung made that clePowerful portrait series brings visibility to trans professionals
You can't be what you can't see.That increasingly popular motto is painfully true for those who aspiNASA spacecraft has roamed billions of miles — but hasn't reached the 'edge'
Zooming through the outer reaches of the solar system, A NASAspacecraft just clocked a distance 60 tMeghan and Harry reveal their newborn son's name
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have announced their newborn son's name: Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Moon spacecraft beams back vivid photo before landing
An uncrewed private spacecraft has reached the moon's orbit, one day ahead of its attempt to land atWebb discovery defies what we know about Milky Way
Astronomers previously thought it took billions of years for galaxies to become stable enough to devConfused governor says looking at webpage's HTML is criminal hacking
Gov. Mike Parson is sick and tired of all these sophisticated, no-good hackers and he's not going toWatch Kathryn Hahn stare longingly at Rachel Weisz set to the 'Carol' score
Kathryn Hahn and Rachel Weisz are made to be together, forever -- at least in queer fanfiction on TuGoogle just took visual search to a whole new level
Have a question about something you can see but can't describe? Just ask Google.Google has unveiledThe planets Venus and Mars are amazing in June, and you should look up
It's a superb time to view our quirky planetary neighbors Venus and Mars.June 2023 brings a number o