"It's one thing to use facial recognition on your own iPhone and you're the one who decides if and when it's used. It's another thing when facial recognition is used by large companies against you," said Albert Fox Cahn, executive director of STOP. He emphasized that the invasive nature of such technology can discriminate and exclude many individuals from accessing public spaces, thus raising significant privacy and ethical concerns.
"When we roll out these invasive, discriminatory and abusive technologies, it really excludes a lot of New Yorkers from our stadiums," Cahn further articulated, highlighting the potential repercussions of facial recognition scanning on community access to public events. This suggests that the implementation of such technologies may not only infringe upon privacy but also perpetuate disparities among different demographic groups.
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