Six key questions
ETHICAL AI complex biometric data is stored and processed . Part of its reasoning for this could be that the company realised the nature and type of consent gained may not have met the existing , or future , standards that regulators may expect for sensitive biometric data .
It can therefore be concluded that commercial users of such data would also be somewhat sceptical of forming a business relationship with Meta on these matters - considering the previous litigations that Facebook has been involved in with privacy regulators .”
Leading biometric authentication firm ID R & D takes consent very seriously . Transparency is the solution , according to President Alexey Khitrov :
“ Meta ' s change of identity came alongside the announcement that it will end the use of its facial recognition software , but many believe facial recognition is highly likely to be used in future metaverses . Users need to choose whether to opt-in or out – and Meta acknowledges this . Nobody should be using face recognition without consent or prior knowledge .”
Six key questions
Genevieve Bell proposes six key questions that we can use as a guideline when discussing AI in surveillance :
• Is the system autonomous ?
• Does the system have agency / control ?
• How do we think about its assurance / safety / does it function properly ?
• What is the interface between systems ?
• What will the indicators be that show that systems work well / efficiently ?
• What is the systems ' intent , what is it designed to do ?