lilmsmaggie
Established
I'm not so sure that we, as amatuers, or even professional photographers can protect the privacy of the people we photograph in public places. The world is getting smaller and smaller in terms of data and information sharing. Somewhere, someplace; Facebook, flicker, blog, corporate and public web sites, data is being mined by someone including our respective governments.
You pointed out Facebook and other companies finalizing face-recognition software, and web crawling algorythms to associate people with photographs. Well, I hate to be the one to burst your bubble but the technology exists NOW in many forms.
Case in point: this company: http://www.l1id.com makes available systems for motor vehicle departments across the U.S. to use face recognition and other biometrics for driver license issuance. Here in California, the Calif. DMV is already begun issuing driver's licenses and identification cards with biometric information embedded in the magnetic strip on the back of the card.
That information is then stored in a data base. And guess what? That information gets shared and made available to all law enforcement agencies across the country and they probably have a copy in THEIR data base!
And to quote Samuel L. Jackson who said in the first "Jurassic Park" film: "Hold onto your Butts! ..." Once that data resides in a data base, someone, anyone with the right tools and intent can then do something called: "Web Data Scraping."
Web Data Scraping is essentially a way to mine data from any web site without detection. 😱 Google: data scraping, web data scrapping, website data extraction, etc.
That's right - without detection. Doesn't matter if its login protected, you can now mine that data whether it be a .pdf or an image file; whether its in a spreadsheet or word document.
How's that for privacy protection?
You pointed out Facebook and other companies finalizing face-recognition software, and web crawling algorythms to associate people with photographs. Well, I hate to be the one to burst your bubble but the technology exists NOW in many forms.
Case in point: this company: http://www.l1id.com makes available systems for motor vehicle departments across the U.S. to use face recognition and other biometrics for driver license issuance. Here in California, the Calif. DMV is already begun issuing driver's licenses and identification cards with biometric information embedded in the magnetic strip on the back of the card.
That information is then stored in a data base. And guess what? That information gets shared and made available to all law enforcement agencies across the country and they probably have a copy in THEIR data base!
And to quote Samuel L. Jackson who said in the first "Jurassic Park" film: "Hold onto your Butts! ..." Once that data resides in a data base, someone, anyone with the right tools and intent can then do something called: "Web Data Scraping."
Web Data Scraping is essentially a way to mine data from any web site without detection. 😱 Google: data scraping, web data scrapping, website data extraction, etc.
That's right - without detection. Doesn't matter if its login protected, you can now mine that data whether it be a .pdf or an image file; whether its in a spreadsheet or word document.
How's that for privacy protection?
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