Soon, it’ll only take a face scan to get some passengers through airport security. On Friday, Alaska Airlines announced plans to expand its facial recognition program to Seattle-Tacoma International ...
The New York Police Department’s use of facial recognition is under scrutiny after a false match led to the wrongful arrest of a Black man. In February, a woman reported a delivery man — around 5 feet ...
A Brooklyn father said he was wrongfully arrested after facial recognition technology used by the New York City Police Department misidentified him. Advocates are now calling for a ban on that ...
States are increasingly clamping down on how tech companies digitally scan and analyze our most sensitive and potentially lucrative commodity: the faces, eyeballs and other "biometric" data of ...
Trevis Williams is eight inches taller than a man accused of flashing a woman in Union Square in February. The police arrested him anyway. Credit...Natalie Keyssar for The New York Times Supported by ...
Sainsbury’s is to use controversial face recognition technology in its stores for the first time. However, the use of facial recognition has been heavily criticised by privacy groups. Campaign group ...
Sainsbury’s has started testing controversial facial recognition technology in its UK supermarkets in a bid to catch shoplifters. The UK's second largest supermarket has launched an eight-week trial ...
Facial recognition software helped Clifton Heights police catch a former Collingdale man suspected of stealing a delivery from a borough home last week. Clifton Heights police report that Brian Delany ...
Sainsbury's, the UK's second largest supermarket chain, has begun an eight-week trial of facial recognition technology in two of its stores as part of its efforts to address the escalating problem of ...
Sainsbury's is to start a trial this week in two stores in Bath and London Sainsbury's is planning to introduce facial recognition technology across its supermarkets in a bid to identify shoplifters.