News

The TSA recently began rolling out a facial recognition program at hundreds of airports nationwide. What does the facial scan actually do, though?
The Dilworth Police Department is taking out a three-year contract with Clearview AI, a facial recognition software company.
Spokeo reports on smart home facial recognition technology, enhancing convenience but raising privacy concerns; adoption hinges on household consent and risk assessment.
CBP is pushing its facial recognition infrastructure from pedestrian and air travel environments into the car lanes of land ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
The Metropolitan Police’s use of live facial-recognition (LFR) technology is unlawful, according to UK equality watchdog, citing the need for deployments of the technology to be necessary, ...
David Ly is the founder of Iveda, having served as CEO and Chairman of the Board of Directors since the company’s inception in 2003. Facial recognition is reshaping not only how public safety is ...
Home Depot is accused of breaking the law by using facial recognition at self-checkout kiosks in Illinois. The Home Depot is facing a class-action lawsuit in Illinois for allegedly collecting ...