Immigration agents have used Mobile Fortify to scan the faces of countless people in the US—including many citizens.
Wegmans, a popular supermarket chain, is now scanning the faces of customers and storing data so its security system can recognize them.
Wegmans is using facial recognition software in a small number of stores in communities with elevated risk. The technology is used to identify individuals who have been previously flagged for ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Exterior of the Wegmans in the Astor Place neighborhood in New York City. (Catherine Douglas Moran/Grocery Dive) This story was ...
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BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) — Walking into a Wegmans store, customers may be unaware that their faces could be scanned and entered into a security system, according to the Rochester-based supermarket chain.
The OFIQ software library is intended to support large-scale biometrics programs with information about the usefulness of photos for biometric comparison.
SwitchBot introduced its SwitchBot Lock Vision Series of smart deadbolts at CES today. The new locks use facial recognition as a primary unlock method, which the company positions as a more foolproof ...
Enter at your own risk. New signs unveiled at some Wegmans across the Big Apple are warning customers that personally-identifying biometric data, such as facial recognition scans, is being stored ...
Websites like ICEList are attempting to hold federal agents accountable—but it’s unclear whether they make the system safer ...