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Facewatch


analyse
Facewatch : the Reality Behind the Marketing Discourse - 18 octobre 2020
Key findings Facewatch is allegedly developping a facial recognition technology that will work when people are wearing masks Statements by the CEO of Facewatch and marketing documents suggest the company is partnering with police departments in the UK - but the reality is unclear Beyond the marketing (...)

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Authorities Must Act on Police Face Surveillance Network by the Backdoor - 18 octobre 2020
Authorities Must Act on Police Face Surveillance Network by the Backdoorrivacy International is calling on regulatory and law enforcement bodies to investigate the roll out of a face surveillance network by a UK company called Facewatch. Key points Facewatch provide facial recognition analysis and biometric (...)

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La montée en puissance des logiciels de reconnaissance ethnique fait craindre des dérives - 29 août 2020
Un certain nombre d’entreprises se vantent de proposer des logiciels capables de repérer l’origine ethnique, mais nombreux sont ceux qui redoutent que ces outils n’alimentent la discrimination Le jour où Revlon a voulu savoir quels rouges à lèvres portaient les femmes issues de différentes origines ethniques et de (...)

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IBM (not) ending facial recognition - our quick thoughts - 23 juin 2020
On June 9th, in light of the global debate against racial injustices, the company IBM announced they would stop selling facial recognition. Here are 4 quick-fire thoughts we have on this. Key points This latest announcement is a PR stunt to distract from the reality : IBM has been profitting from the sale of (...)

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’We are hurtling towards a surveillance state’ : the rise of facial recognition technology - 1er novembre 2019
It can pick out shoplifters, international criminals and lost children in seconds. But as the cameras proliferate, who’s watching the watchers ? Gordon’s wine bar is reached through a discreet side-door, a few paces from the slipstream of London theatregoers and suited professionals powering towards their evening (...)

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Pre-crime arrives in the UK : Better make sure your face stays off the crowdsourced watch list - 18 décembre 2015
You can now be ushered out of a shop, even if you haven’t done anything wrong yet. As you may know, we’re big fans of CCTV in the UK. At the last count there was around 6 million CCTV cameras in the UK, or about one for every ten people living here. Most of these cameras are passive : they don’t actually do (...)

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Réseaux sociaux, applications, nouvelles technologies : la police londonienne à l’heure du 2.0 - 7 juillet 2012
Trois semaines avant le début des Jeux olympiques de Londres, la police londonienne se prépare également à gérer les éventuels débordements que pourrait engendrer le premier anniversaire des émeutes qui ont secoué Londres et d’autres villes anglaises en août 2011. Si la décision d’installer une batterie antimissiles sur le (...)

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Crowd-sourcing used to trace London riot suspects - 26 juin 2012
The Metropolitan Police is hoping to use crowd-sourcing to identify people suspected of committing crimes in last year’s riots in London. Officers are to upload up to 2,800 CCTV images taken during the disorder in August on to its smartphone app. The free Facewatch ID app then allows users to sort the photographs (...)