Facial recognition in public spaces is wild. Feels like we all accidentally signed up to be background actors in a low budget sci-fi movie 
I checked a few studies last week. NIST testing in the US showed accuracy improved massively over the last few years, but bias issues still exist depending on lighting, camera angle, ethnicity datasets etc. A lot of cities slowed deployment because of that.Genuine question, does facial recognition actually work accurately in crowded places? Or are there still a lot of false matches happening?
Yeah I agree with that part. Most people are okay with cameras until they realize the footage can be analyzed forever.people say its for safety but WHO checking the ppl who own the data?? thats scary tbh