Meta removed NameTag facial recognition code from its AI app after WIRED found biometric software on 50 million phones that Meta said "does not exist." ...
Dormant face-recognition code reportedly appeared in Meta’s smart glasses app, then disappeared after scrutiny. That has put Meta’s AI eyewear plans back under the privacy spotlight.
Meta secretly shipped facial recognition code in Ray-Ban smart glasses app, then deleted it within 24 hours after WIRED ...
Last week, Wired reported that Meta quietly pushed code for a yet-to-be-released face-recognition system supposedly designed ...
The 'disappearing into the bushes like Homer Simpson' strategy is a bold choice.
The code WIRED identified is gone from the latest version of Meta AI, the companion app for the company’s smart glasses. Meta ...
The feature, reportedly called "NameTag," isn't active right now. But according to the investigation, code related to facial ...
An investigation has discovered that Meta smart glasses have an embedded “Faceprint” code that can track faces.
Meta has been quietly laying the groundwork for smart glasses that could identify people as wearers of the shades walk by, ...
The work addresses a gap in biometric testing, as NIST’s IREX has focused primarily on closed-source commercial iris ...
A class action lawsuit has been filed against The Walt Disney Co. over Disneyland’s use of facial recognition technology at park entrances. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. A visitor has filed a $5-million lawsuit against Disneyland for allegedly failing to properly disclose the use of ...