Private eyes are watching you!
United Kingdom is Leading Pack in Face Recognition;
Is U.S. Next?
LONDON, England - May 19, 2008 - A
17-year-old walks into a liquor store, carries a 12-pack of beer up to the
counter and hands the clerk a flawless fake ID. Unbeknownst to him, the clerk
need not even glance at the ID before turning him down. His face gave him away.
A facial recognition system placed behind the store counter analyzes the teen's
17-year-old features and informs the clerk of his illegal age. It's just one of
a litany of uses for the fast-evolving surveillance technology, a field that
has security experts salivating and privacy advocates bracing for a battle.
Computers that can pick out
fugitives in a crowd, video cameras that scold people for littering, eyes in
the sky that detect crimes as they're being committed. While these scenarios may
sound straight out of George Orwell's "1984," they are becoming
reality and could be headed for your corner store sooner than you think.
Although still being researched
across the globe, facial recognition technology has already taken hold,
particularly in Great Britain.
Last week, Budgens, a U.K. grocery
story chain, announced that it would use facial recognition technology to
prevent its clerks from selling alcohol and cigarettes to underage customers.
The photos of customers who were refused previously will be stored in a
database, and then if the offenders come in to buy similar products again, the
clerk will be alerted.
Similarly, the British government
plans to roll out a facial recognition pilot program in London airports this
summer. People who hold biometric U.K. and EU passports can pass through
unmanned gates. At the gate, their faces will be scanned to match them to their
passport records.
Though the technology has been
around for years and the British are embracing it and moving forward, technology
experts say facial recognition - and the cameras needed to support it -
wouldn't fly with privacy-obsessed Americans, at least not yet.
"One of the reasons that the
United Kingdom. has moved forward on this a little faster than other places is
there's just a large use of cameras in support of crime reduction in
general," said Aaron Bobick, chairman of the school of interactive
computing at Georgia Tech, which has done research into both facial and gait
recognition. "Once that starts to make video available, then the question
of what you can do with that video becomes important."
Britain has a long history of
watching its citizenry. For the past 25 years, the public places in many U.K.
cities have been monitored by closed circuit television cameras, or CCTV. The
surveillance cameras were prompted partially by IRA bombings and terrorism
fears.
According to a 2006 report by the Surveillance Studies
Network, a nonprofit watchdog group, and presented to the Information
Commissioner's Office, the United Kingdom has more surveillance cameras than
any other in the world; at least 4.2 million of them are pointed on the
country's public streets, one camera for every 14 people.