Facebook, Citing Societal Concerns, Plans to Shut Down Facial Recognition System
Saying it wants “to find the right balance” with the technology, the social network will delete the face scan data of more than one billion users.
Facebook plans to shut down its decade-old facial
recognition system this month, deleting the face scan data of more than one
billion users and effectively eliminating a feature that has fueled privacy concerns,
government investigations, a class-action lawsuit and regulatory woes.
Jerome Pesenti, vice president of artificial intelligence at
Meta, Facebook’s newly named parent company, said in a blog post on Tuesday
that the social network was making the change because of “many concerns about
the place of facial recognition technology in society.” He added that the
company still saw the software as a powerful tool, but “every new technology
brings with it potential for both benefit and concern, and we want to find the
right balance.”
The decision shutters a feature that was introduced in
December 2010 so that Facebook users could save time. The facial-recognition
software automatically identified people who appeared in users’ digital photo
albums and suggested users “tag” them all with a click, linking their accounts
to the images. Facebook now has built one of the largest repositories of
digital photos in the world, partly thanks to this software.
No comments