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Meta AI app includes dormant facial recognition code for smart glasses

Created at 5 Jun · 2:36 PM5 sources↑ Market-relevant4 events
IN SHORT

Meta has added dormant facial recognition code, internally called NameTag, to its Meta AI app. The code, which includes AI models for detecting, cropping, and encoding faces, could enable future smart glasses to identify people. Meta states it is merely exploring the feature and has made no final decisions.

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Key Numbers

threeAI models for facial recognition

Who's Involved

Meta
Technology company developing AI and smart glasses
Wired
Publication that discovered the dormant code
ACLU
Organization that urged Meta to halt facial recognition plans
Fight for the Future
Organization that urged Meta to halt facial recognition plans

↳ Why This Matters

The inclusion of dormant facial recognition code in a widely distributed app raises significant privacy concerns, suggesting Meta may be preparing to deploy advanced surveillance capabilities through its smart glasses without explicit user consent or transparency.

Key facts

  • Meta added dormant facial recognition code to its Meta AI app.
  • The code, named NameTag, is intended for potential use in smart glasses.
  • The feature includes AI models for face detection, cropping, and encoding.
  • Meta states it is "exploring" the feature and has made no final decisions.
  • Meta has previously faced fines for collecting biometric data without consent.

Meta has reportedly added dormant facial recognition technology, internally named NameTag, to its Meta AI app through multiple updates this year. This code could potentially enable Meta's smart glasses, including Ray-Ban and Oakley models, to identify people captured by their cameras. The groundwork for this feature involves three AI models for face detection, cropping, and encoding, which are already present on the phones of users who have the Meta AI app installed. Security researchers suggest the app is nearly ready for such a feature. A Meta spokesperson stated that the company is "exploring" this capability, emphasizing that nothing has been released to consumers and no final decision has been made. They assured a thoughtful and transparent approach if a feature is eventually rolled out, and confirmed no central face database would be built. This development follows past controversies where Meta paid significant fines for collecting biometric data without consent and its association with Clearview AI's data scraping. The news also comes shortly after 70 organizations, including the ACLU and Fight for the Future, sent a letter urging Meta to abandon any plans for facial recognition in its smart glasses.

Frequently asked questions

NameTag is the internal name for a dormant facial recognition feature that Meta has added code for into its Meta AI app.

The code is reportedly intended for potential future use in Meta's smart glasses, allowing them to identify people captured by the camera.

No, Meta states it is merely 'exploring' the feature and has made no final decisions on whether to release it.

The presence of this code raises concerns about potential future privacy violations and surveillance capabilities through Meta's smart glasses.

What Happens Next

01Meta may provide further clarification or a formal response to privacy concerns regarding the facial recognition code.
02Meta may decide whether to proceed with or abandon the NameTag feature for its smart glasses.

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Cadence

How It Developed

6 Jun · 12:41 AM
A new report claims Meta secretly integrated facial recognition software with its smart glasses, though it's not user-facing.
SFGate via PiQSuite
5 Jun · 6:25 PM
A new report reveals Meta has embedded facial recognition tech for smart glasses into a widely downloaded app, raising privacy alarms.
New York Post via PiQSuite
5 Jun · 3:05 PM
Meta's smart glasses feature hidden surveillance code within its app
The Independent via PiQSuite
5 Jun · 2:30 PM
Meta's AI app contains dormant code for facial recognition, raising concerns about its smart glasses plans.
Gizmodo via PiQSuite

Sources

T1
Meta's Facial Recognition Plans for Smart Glasses Are Worse Than We Thoughtm.piqsuite.com
T1
Meta's smart glasses feature hidden surveillance code within its appm.piqsuite.com
T1
Meta quietly added facial recognition to smart glasses, sparking major privacy concerns: reportm.piqsuite.com
T1
Meta secretly integrated facial recognition software with smart glasses, report saysm.piqsuite.com
T1
Meta quietly added facial recognition code for smart glasses to its app, says its just exploringm.piqsuite.com

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