Borders to Use CCTV Face Recognition 380
albanach writes: "This story at the Sunday Herald newspaper says Borders Bookshop is to become the world's first retailer to use face recognition software linked to their in-store CCTV cameras to automagically identify known shoplifters."
That does it! (Score:2, Funny)
I saw a woman the other day who had a bar code tattoo on her arm. I thought it was funny (wry comment on the commodification of all life. ha ha). Now I'm not so sure.
Re:That does it! (Score:2)
Seriously, whether it's companies, the Fourth Reich, or parents tattooing their children "for safety", I find it to be disgusting. It's just one step closer to slavery.
What worries me most about this.. (Score:5, Insightful)
If it will contain only those who have been convicted of shoplifting, then surely this is wrong; our system of justice is based on the concept that once someone has paid the penalty for their crime, they have reformed and should no longer be punished further. If it will contain those accused of shoplifting, but not prosecuted, then Borders will be acting as judge and jury without any proper process.
Who is to vet this database? Will the database be shared with other retail establishments who want to implement a similar system?
I find the whole idea deeply, deeply troubling.
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:4, Insightful)
How about the kid who nicks something from a shop when they are in their early teens? As a 40 year old, are they still going to be asked to leave the shop, or have their every move watched?
Let's just hope we don't end up with a case of "I got a speeding ticket a few years back, and they won't let me into Tesco because I'm a known criminal. Maybe a little extravagant, but I think you can see where I'm coming from.
In the US, prisons are being dubbed "Correctional facilities", I believe. This is more the sort of attitude we need. "You've done the crime, been punished, now get out there and live your life normally. Don't do it again."
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Here's the way I see it: Companies often have a hard time catching shoplifters, because, 1) they acn't (legally) restrain a person before they've left the store. (I can put a book into my pocket and still go to the checkoput and pay for it; it's not shoplifting until you've left the store.) and 2) Once you leave the building, store security can not restarin you. They can only ask you to stay. (Howver, a shoplifter is allowed to legally walk away, as only police officers are allowed to restrain them.), and 3) the store can't prosecute them unless the have evidence (video cameras will work, but the employees' words can be easily beaten in court.)
Now supposing someone steals a book from the store, gets caught, but leaves anyway, the store can't really do anything, except to ban the person from entering the store (which they can legally do to anybody, as long as it's not due to racial or sexual discrimination.
The video camera can identify known shoplifters (for that store) and security can then ask them to leave the store. Whether the database can legally be shared with other stores or not I don't know, but I'm willing to bet that that issue will eventually go to court.
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:3, Informative)
Here's the way I see it: Companies often have a hard time catching shoplifters, because, 1) they acn't (legally) restrain a person before they've left the store. (I can put a book into my pocket and still go to the checkoput and pay for it; it's not shoplifting until you've left the store.) and 2) Once you leave the building, store security can not restarin you. They can only ask you to stay. (Howver, a shoplifter is allowed to legally walk away, as only police officers are allowed to restrain them.), and 3) the store can't prosecute them unless the have evidence (video cameras will work, but the employees' words can be easily beaten in court.)
That's incorrect. In most places you can restrain and report to the police anyone you see who commits a crime. This is what a "citizen's arrest" is. A few state laws are mentioned here [constitution.org] including DC, Tenn, Mass, Kentucky, Utah. California is mentioned here [csudh.edu]. Of course its tricky business and you can get yourself in legal trouble if you harm the person or falsely accuse them. A short guide on that is here [yahoo.com]. I remember a show where this guy comes into a cafeteria with a baseball bat. So the staff takes the bat and beats the guy for about 10 minutes. Now they restrained a lawbreaker, but they got sued theirselves. So that kind of restraint is not legal, but it is legal to have a system that automatically locks the doors so the person can't leave. By the way, I am not a lawyer so don't go out being batman without consulting a lawyer first.
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
C'mon, you're PUNishing us!
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
>Companies often have a
>hard time catching shoplifters, because, 1)
>they acn't (legally) restrain a person before
>they've left the store.
I don't know what the laws are in your state,
but at least in Texas (the only state where I've
worked retail) the law is based on the point of
concealment. You don't have to wait for the perp to leave the store at all. They only need to conceal the merchandise in such a way to make you suspicious.
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
Very straightforward, assuming the software works in a very high percentage of cases.
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
Up until reading this comment, I wasn't especially scared of the system. I assumed they'd populate the database with individuals who had previously been caught shop-lifting at Borders and had been asked never to return. In short, it would've been a high-tech version of the Simpsons's Comic Book Guy's "Banned for Life" wall.
But now I'm worried. Enough people look like me that my friends at school have told me about how they ran into several dopplegangers of me, who they mistook for me until they got closer. I suspect people who know me would have a hard time telling the difference from security camera footage. I suspect strangers and a computer system would easily be fooled.
It gets worse, however. My one defense against being mistaken for the shoplifter is that I've got a state-issued piece of paper that I carry around that says who I am. Unfortunately, if they don't know who the videotaped shoplifter was, pulling out my id will serve exactly one purpose -- to get my name listed on their records as the shoplifter.
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
I, personally, don't have a problem with this, as long as they're targeting specific individuals, and not profiling races or other demographics.
Having worked in retail, I can tell you that 90% of the people who shoplift or try to shoplift don't end up on the wrong side of a conviction, either because they get away with their $5 book, (or $70 textbook), or for various other reasons, never go to trial, often being let off with a warning, or banishment from the store.
If I see someone attempting to shoplift from my store, or if they actually get away, I feel that I'm fully within my rights to tell them that they can't come back in my store. If I have a security system that lets me know when they try to, so much the better. If I own 200 stores and I can make sure that someone who was seen shoplifting in one of my stores doesn't get inside another, that's great.
The difference here is that I'm basing my 'block list' on my company's personal experience with the individual in question, which I have more faith in than a master list of convicted shoplifters.
I wouldn't want to block everyone some government list says is a likely shoplifter, but I want to be able to control entry to my store, blocking people I personally don't trust, or have been victimized by in the past.
To put it another way: Is there something wrong with me seeing someone steal a book, then come in the next day, and my telling them that they have to leave? Is it wrong if I have a system that will watch the doors to help me with this task? How is this more onerous than a standard security system which, in effect, is saying "I don't trust anyone."
Would a facial recognition system at the entrances and exits be a good thing if it meant that I could get rid of the security cameras along every aisle, spying on everyone, all the time?
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
99.99% Accuracy (Score:2)
Beyond the issue of mistakes, it's disturbing to consider the possible future of this technology. Their databases will be filled with people they thought were shopilifting, or people accused of shopilifting later found innocent, and people who were convicted but have since reformed. One of the biggest hurdles to overcome as a convicted criminal is getting beyong the image of being a convicted criminal, and being locked out of stores isn't going to help that.
Think for a moment how many stores you visit that use video cameras. Now just imagine if all of them had facial recognition technology. I mean why wouldn't they use it? It reduces shrink problems, and overall costs will drop exponentially making the technology viable for even the smallest stores. Hook these up to a police database, and think of what happens...
You, a convicted criminal are now out of prison ready to straighten up and fly right. You go to the local liquor store, a camera identifies and tags you as a criminal. The manager asks you to leave. So you go to the grocery store and get the same treatment. How can you really get on with your life if nobody will let you be a part of society again?
I dunno, I begin to think that maybe you accept a certain amount of entropy in the system. That you, as a business plan for a certain portion of your stock getting stolen and a certain portion of money going to pay for security, etc. Maybe there's a certain point of diminshing returns where the cost for our society is not worth the economic efficiencies of it.
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
It's reasonable that if you steal something from Borders you can never go back there (or at least not until you age enough that the camera can't recognize you). But what if they network this (or hook it up to a police database) so that if you steal something form Borders you can never enter any bookstore?
It gets worse. Stores are private property. The owners don't need an excuse for throwing you out. We already have credit reporting agencies (private for-profit companies) that maintain databases of individuals they judge to be poor credit risks. It's not hard to imagine similar databases of people believed to be a poor shiplifting risk. One store snaps your picture and says you are a "suspected" shoplifter, and suddenly you're banned from all stores.
Take it yet a step further. Many landlords now do credit checks of prospective tenants. Why not take a picture and see if the tenant is a suspected shoplifter? The same thing could happen if you're looking for a job.
Where do you draw the line and stop this sort of thing?
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
...unless you look a lot like someone who shoplifts...
Ah I get it:
Don't steal stuff, and don't look like other people and you are unlikely to get in trouble
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
The story was pretty unclear on whether they watch people closely, or eject them. If they watch closely, that probably doesn't harm anyone much (secondary uses of the images may though). However I'm kinda thinking they will eject people. Ironicly the closer the software gets to perfect the larger the chance that it will be misused, eh?
Re:What worries me most about this.. (Score:2)
Oh, you mean like [blacks|hispanics|arabs|whatever]? The way I see it, we're just getting a taste of our own medicine. I support their right to do it, but you can bet they'll never catch me on their cameras because I don't plan on setting foot into a Borders any time soon again.
What scares the bejeezus out of me is the not-so-far-off day when this technology becomes more prevalent, and one database is subscribed to by many chain retailers. Think it won't happen? What do you think they do to authorize your check? Submit an ACH debit? That's why I use perhaps three checks a year. Just wait for the fun when the government gets their mitts into it. My guess is it will be billed as "helping catch fugitives by finding where they've been lately." Pair that off with customer affinity cards that many retailers offer, most notably grocery stores, and they'll have a face, a name, and an address, all available only because you look like someone believed to be a criminal.
Guess it's time to start thinking about wearing a ski mask when going shopping or visiting the bank.
Re:Simple: They'll make it themselves. (Score:2)
Nothing at all wrong with it... UNLESS they make a mistake. And you know they will. CCD cameras take fuzzy pictures which increases that chance. They must be very confident that their system is 100% foolproof in the face of teh catastrophic liability this exposes them to...
If a private corp fingers you as a criminal and tries to detain you, and cause you embarassment in public, SUE THE FUCK OUT OF THEM!
A government has certain immunities from lawsuits, a private corp does not.
A way around this... (Score:5, Funny)
Nixon entered via west entrance
(last message repeated 27 times)
Yeah, I know its stupid, but thats why its a joke.
-paul
don't shop there (Score:3, Informative)
Don't shop there, and tell all your friends why, too.
Re:don't shop there (Score:3, Insightful)
Be sure you get rankled now. Five years from now, when the only place that'll sell you food is a urine-stained 7-11 in Compton because your face is a 92.4% match to a convicted felon in Joliet, you'll be forced to accept it. By then it'll be too late.
"If you don't do anything wrong, you have nothing to fear."...
Re:don't shop there (Score:2)
CompUSA, Fry's electronics, etc... they are all the same. Just walk right by them, what are they going to do?
It's kind of funny, actually, to hear them going "sir, SIR, excuse me..." as you just walk out the door.
I'm eagerly waiting for the day when one of them grabs me as I walk out so I can sue the shit out of them.
Re:don't shop there (Score:3, Informative)
According to California Penal Code section 490.5. (f) (1):
A merchant may detain a person for a reasonable time for the purpose of conducting an investigation in a reasonable manner whenever the merchant has probable cause to believe the person to be detained is attempting to unlawfully take or has unlawfully taken merchandise from the merchant's premises.
(3) During the period of detention any items which a merchant or theater owner, or any items which a person employed by a library facility has probable cause to believe are unlawfully taken from the premises of the merchant or library facility, or recorded on theater premises, and which are in plain view may be examined by the merchant, theater owner, or person employed by a library facility for the purposes of ascertaining the ownership thereof.
So you see, unless they already have reason to suspect you've broken the law, they cannot require you to submit to these searches.
Unfortunately, I do not believe the same (or similar) law would apply to facial recognition. You have no reasonable assumption of privacy with respect to your physical appearance when in a public place (commercial private property included).
Re:Fry's and "shrinkage" (Score:2)
The paper was a justification for having well documented security procedures (the paper authors would like to sell clients very expensive consulting) and thorough physical security. The paper detailed Fry's internal auditing team, the daily (and sometimes bi-hourly) stock inspection, the separation of duties, the use of cages for extremely high value small components with two-person "concept team" pass-through to checkout(did you ever notice that no disk or simm reaches the counter until after your credit card has been approved or the cash is in the drawer?), and the final security guys with their pink X's on the customer receipts. The cash counting rooms were set up by Las Vegas security experts who take the movement of large value receipts very seriously.
All of those procedures are designed to make criminals think twice about targeting Fry's. Just by raising the bar slightly, at a slightly increased cost, they have lowered their losses from 40% of all stock to just 8%, and if you multiply that by their annual turnover, the savings is huge.
The guys on the door don't actually stop any theft by checking bags and receipts, their job is to put fear into stupid thieves before a crime takes place. It is very effective, even if the X'ers don't find one theft in an entire week.
I was in a Fry's last month, the whole purpose was to check out if all their security was just like in the consulting paper (I didn't need to buy any gadgets, since I had just come from SE Asia
the AC
Re:Fry's and "shrinkage" (Score:2)
This reminds me of my battle with my local wal-mart over their incompetently run shoplifter scanners...
Something like 5 times in a ROW, the fucking scanner went off when I tried to leave after buying a movie... The last time, I blew up on them, demanded the manager (who was VERY unapologetic). After he copped his `tude with me I demanded my cash back, which they did, after some reluctance. I've never been back there again.
Would THAT get me on the scanner as a "suspected shoplifter"? Because a wal-mart minumum wage slave wage slave can't desensitize their fucking VHS tapes?
Re:don't shop there (Score:2)
If you don't like it... (Score:2, Interesting)
1) Load gun
2) Aim at foot
3) Pull trigger
Re:If you don't like it... (Score:2)
Do what to their customers? Video monitor them and try and prevent shoplifting? They've been doing that for ages. You just have a huge database to match from rather than one security guard's mind now. This will only affect two groups of people: shoplifters and people who look like shoplifters. Group A probably don't "shop" at Borders anyway, so by them boycotting Borders. Borders isn't losing any money (in fact, they're probably gaining money). Group B aren't Group B until they're actually accused, and if Borders is really smart, they won't actually do anything with the "accused" until they break the law by actually shoplifting something (ie. use the system to keep a closer eye on people who may be potential shoplifters). Of course, details are fuzzy, but the Slashdot crowd jumps on the worst-case-scenario bandwagon and proceeds to shoot themselves in the foot.
You're right, if you don't like it, don't shop there. If you're really lucky, you'll end up with no bookstores to shop at all because you're paranoid.
Re:If you don't like it... (Score:2)
Or you'll end up with bookstores that don't treat their own customers like criminals.
Either way, you end up with fewer bookstores that do treat their customers like criminals.
If you don't like it...shop there! (Score:2)
Why not try building a relationship with a *local* bookstore that'll bend over backward to order or find books for you, and doesn't infringe on your rights? You might be surprised that the concept of customer support can involve friendly bookophiles who treat you respectfully. Might even help out your local economy by putting money back into it directly...
Re:If you don't like it... (Score:2)
Well, I just returned from a conference in Dublin, Ireland, and I was terrified to see that there are cameras everywhere! I mean, it's probably not an inch of that city that isn't covered, and it's not only indoors, but outdoors as well. Even the university campus has infrared cameras all over the campus. I wasn't really concerned about this issue before I went there, I didn't think it could ever be that bad. But the simple fact is, they are all ready to implement this, if they can get away with it.
When that happens, you have to boycot a whole city. OK, you're not living in Dublin, so why should you care? Because it's going to happen in the city you live in too!
They can do what they want on private property (Score:2, Insightful)
The public has a right to be angered by public surveilence as was done at the Super Bowl [rand.org] but if you don't like being surveiled on provate property, don't enter that private property. It's as simple as that.
--CTH
If you want my business, don't surveil me. (Score:2)
As usual, "Representative" means "Paid Bullshiter" (Score:2)
Bullshit, and bullshit. I'm not going to even comment on the first sentence. The second is ridiculous. Anyone who actually thinks a large corporation truly cares about human rights gets their views on corporate America solely from TV ads. The statement might be true, if it were instead "If the system got us enough bad publicity that it threatened our bottom line then Borders wouldn't be using it."
Which of course means that the only way to stop them from using it is to not shop at Borders, and to let them know why.
Sigh. Look -- I understand this is how capitalism is supposed to work, but I get a little sick of having to perform an endless series of boycotts in a desperate game of wack-a-corp just to try to get shit upon less frequently.
Several interesting papers of Facial Recognition (Score:3, Informative)
-CTH
Quick! (Score:3)
Has software ever been less than perfect? (Score:2)
I will probably not go back to Borders. There are other bookstores.
I've never stolen anything, and until now have been a loyal Borders customer. However, suppose the equipment makes a mistake? (Has any Slashdot reader ever known software to be less than perfect?) Suppose the equipment thinks I resemble someone else? The Border's management may think they've caught someone; they will find it difficult to recognize that the equipment has failed.
Sure the liklihood is small. But I stay away from dangerous areas of my city for the same reason. I don't want even a small chance of a hassle.
It's easy to just switch bookstores.
Re:Has software ever been less than perfect? (Score:2)
It is, in fact, incredible how much trust people have in computers. I just recently read an editorial in a german computer magazine how they received, thanks to code red, confidential documents from another company, tried to inform them by email about the problem, and were ignored. Finally they called them, and were told that this couldn't be true, the company would be using virus scanning software.
If the majority of people continues to applaud at the installation of such system because it "fights criminals", it won't stay that easy. More and more stores will install surveillance systems, until eventually you'll have a hard time getting everything you need without being watched.
What happens when these cameras are everywhere? (Score:2)
"I did not see this question answered in the article and I find this a serious omission."
I agree, it is definitely a serious admission. However, I think that, whatever the policy is, there will be store managers and employees who don't follow the policy.
What happens when these cameras are everywhere? Will they be used for other purposes? Will they be used by the employees to alert themselves when the boss is present? Will they be used to track political opponents? There were many questions not considered in the article.
Personal Defense (Score:2)
By all means install such a system at your own front door to identify employees of corporations that spy on you and/or support the DMCA, so they can be relentlessly kept out of your home, your business, your life. Personal ostracization can be very effective, on a wide-spread scale.
Plus, it works well for predators of other kinds, such as convicted rapists and murderers and pedophiles, of which record may be kept on private networks.
Thank God, maybe prices will drop... (Score:4, Troll)
I still don't see the problem with this. I'm for any business enacting any policy they please within the confines of their store.
If you don't want to be watched, don't go there, and make it a habit to write letters about it to advertisers and distributors.
I don't mind it a bit, since I haven't done anything wrong. If they want to watch me closer because they think I'm a thief, good for them.
If the thieves stop going to those stores because they bet profiles, maybe prices will drop.
If you want privacy, go get some acreage of land in the mountains and stay out of civilization. I don't see ANY privacy loss if you're as much at fault for entering THEIR private property.
Its cameras on the street that worry me, but we get videotaped by ATMs and banks and at the McDonald's and the convenient store, whats so wrong with filtering those images so security can do a better job?
Re:Thank God, maybe prices will drop... (Score:2)
That is the consumer's hope, but the reality is that once prices go up they never come back down. If stores can do anything to decrease loss, it goes straight into their pockets.
Have you ever heard of a shop declaring that it is lowering prices thanks to a decrease in shoplifting? No, of course not. That goes to shareholders.
For the record, I will never patronize Borders again, and hope that enough of the word gets out to enrage a noticeable portion of their customers.
Re:Thank God, maybe prices will drop... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Thank God, maybe prices will drop... (Score:3, Insightful)
Next it might be any shoplifters
Actually, one of the next steps is most likely going to be in the field of gesture/behaviour recognition. Granted, its probably in the region of five to twenty years from actual commercial products, but long-term, I plan to be living on this planet much longer than that. The general idea is that image-processing software will examine the CCTV image, and in real-time attempt to characterize and describe what you are doing. So the software might be able to determine itself with reasonable probability whether or not you are attempting to shoplift. It might characterize "suspicious behaviour", and not unthinkably, "pedophile behaviour". Basically, anything that a human watcher is capable of doing, software is theoretically capable of doing as much at a minimum, and potentially more.
This type of software already exists (I worked with some researchers doing this several years ago), and while it is still somewhat primitive, it won't be for too much longer. In general there seems to be a dearth of long-term thinking here on /. (and in the general populace actually)
The software will almost certainly be able to record facial signatures, one relatively benign use of which would be to identify repeat customers (a real-life cookie), but I'm sure anyone with a bit of imagination could come up with less benign uses. Compare, for example, to the web-tracking techniques in use today - since the majority of banner ads on the web are served by a tiny handul of companies, the use of cookies can be used to "track" web surfer movements, building a database. It would only take a few affiliations between such companies and companies on the web who know your actual identity for them to connect their surfing-habit database to specific individuals. Fast-forward to 2030 - now almost any shop you enter has a CCTV system, and a tiny handful of companies provide this service to all shops. By networking the systems (computer technology will have improved a lot by then), these companies could now track individuals as they moved through various shopping malls. A database of your mall-surfing habits, even your purchasing habits. A few clever affiliations (e.g. with some stores who have "member cards"), and suddenly these companies can associate the facial-signature/mall-surfing database with a specific persons identity. Some more imagination required to extrapolate what might follow from that ..
Re:Thank God, maybe prices will drop... (Score:3, Interesting)
Give me a break. (Score:4, Insightful)
Which of course, begs the question, if three quarters of their theft is internal why are they monitoring customers instead of their employees?
On top of that, in most of the Borders I've been in, most employees do not respond to the beeping security gate at the entrance. Half the time they wave the patron through! Perhaps if they stationed a security employee at the door to check those instances (ala Best Buy) maybe that level of security would actually be effective.
I still don't see the problem with this. I'm for any business enacting any policy they please within the confines of their store.
What if they could perform random searches of your person? Your car? (Hey, it's in their lot!) Unlikely? Of course. But what if this became widespread and unavoidable? (as a lot of the video monitoring we find commonplace today was 30 years ago) When does it become too intrusive?
If you don't want to be watched, don't go there, and make it a habit to write letters about it to advertisers and distributors.
I always preferred Borders to Barnes & Noble, but I'm switching now (with a handwritten letter to both to let them know why!).
I don't mind it a bit, since I haven't done anything wrong. If they want to watch me closer because they think I'm a thief, good for them.
Would you mind if a security guard followed you around the store? Would you mind being randomly searched by a Borders supervisor in the middle of your browsing? Would you allow the police to search your car without a reason? What about your house without a warrant? You've done nothing wrong, so you shouldn't mind, right? I'm sorry but I will never understand this type of mentality. Just because you've done nothing wrong does NOT justify their intrusion. The burden of proof lies with them to prove your guilt, not with you, your innocence. If people's commitment to privacy only revolves around how inconvient a search is, then we have already lost.
If the thieves stop going to those stores because they bet profiles, maybe prices will drop.
And I bet I can walk on water and turn water to wine. Customer discounts winning over higher profits would only be a miracle.
If you want privacy, go get some acreage of land in the mountains and stay out of civilization. I don't see ANY privacy loss if you're as much at fault for entering THEIR private property.
See my comment above for my take on your mentality. Would it be okay for them to record and broadcast your conversations while in their store? Would it be okay for them to record you in the bathroom and broadcast that? Would it be okay for a hotel manager to watch your wife shower because you are renting his rooms? Just because you in on private property does not mean you do not have a reasonable expectation to privacy.
Its cameras on the street that worry me, but we get videotaped by ATMs and banks and at the McDonald's and the convenient store, whats so wrong with filtering those images so security can do a better job?
I am absolutely baffled why recording on public streets would bother you and recording at Borders does not. When did it become common thought that the (imagined) right to corporate profit trumps individual human rights? Corporations and businesses are legal fictions that exist at the leisure of the public, not the other way around. We seem to be forgetting this, at our own peril.
Why this differs from what Tampa is doing (Score:5, Insightful)
First of all, Borders is legally within their rights to do this. The store is private property, and they're perfectly within their rights to do this. Hell, I think it would even be legal for them to say something to say, "no customers of skin color X allowed", although the public relations disaster would destroy them instantly (note: they couldn't do the same for employees).*
OTOH, different laws and standards apply to what governments can do. City streets are public property, not private. It's highly inappropriate for the government to forcibly take your money (taxation), then use it to institute machine surveillance of you and other innocent citizens.
I used to work at a grocery store, and, if we ever caught a shoplifter, we would make them sign something acknowledging their crime, and make them promise never to enter one of our stores again. If they did, we'd prosecute. Enforcement was left to in-store detectives, and I can tell you they weren't 100% accurate. Even if the occasional false alarm happens with the Borders system, it only has to be better than a detective to be worth-while and a benefit to everybody.
The appropriate response to a "positive" ID by this face recognition system is closer surveillance by humans. If a human confirms that the person in question is a previous shoplifter, then they should be asked to leave. If, on the other hand, Guido and his rent-a-cop friends immediately start beating you with the Webster Unabridged New English Dictionary because their system beeped, then you can sue them. If it offends you on principle, shop elsewhere.
Here's a quick summary of why this is different than the Tampa situation:
Somebody in an earlier message said something to the effect that it's not right to further persecute shoplifters who have already been prosecuted and done their time. Of that person, I ask, if somebody stole from you, did a few weeks in jail, then was released, would you feel obligated to let him back in your house? Why should it be any different for Borders?
*Generally, private organizations are allowed to discriminate with their membership on racial, religious, or sexual lines. Obviously, the Catholic Church down the street isn't legally obliged to allow Church of Satan members to join, even if denying them constitutes religious discrimination. Gyms are allowed to restrict their customer base to women-only. If they can do that, then bookstores can restrict customers to people who aren't in their database of shady characters. When you start employing people for money, then different laws apply.
Re:Why this differs from what Tampa is doing (Score:2)
Until B&N and every other bookstore starts doing it.
I mean, if Borders starts getting SPECTACULAR results from it - a very low false positive rate, decent PR, etc - then you can be sure others will adopt it.
That's why it bothers me. While I agree with you, before long, there won't be many places to shop that don't implement this - if it works.
Re the last comment (allowing them back in your store): you know, I agree with you here, too, but the whole point of the judicial system was SUPPOSED to be for rehabilitation. Yes, you lock up violent offenders and such, but for "the rest of them", it's supposed to make you not want to go to jail anymore, fly straight and narrow.
It's probably a tangential, "offtopic" argument, but have we just completely surrendered any notion of rehabilitation? Once a criminal, always a criminal? Must they wear that scarlet letter forever? Given the rates of recitivism (sp?), maybe.
Re:Why this differs from what Tampa is doing (Score:2)
True. If it works, everyone will use it. So where's the problem?
Re the last comment (allowing them back in your store): you know, I agree with you here, too, but the whole point of the judicial system was SUPPOSED to be for rehabilitation.
No, that's just one of the four purposes of imprisoning criminals. Here are the other three: punishment, getting them off the streets so they don't break more laws, and appeasing victims.
Yes, you lock up violent offenders and such, but for "the rest of them", it's supposed to make you not want to go to jail anymore, fly straight and narrow.
Sure, and maybe, after you start getting kicked out of all the Borders stores around, you'll realize that, if you keep shoplifting, you won't be able to shop anywhere.
Re:Why this differs from what Tampa is doing (Score:2)
If women's-only gyms can kick me out for having a penis, then surely bookstores can kick people out for having previously shoplifted (last I checked, having a penis wasn't a crime, although there are some extremists who'd like to change that). Bookstores can even kick you out if you look suspicious--it's their right, just as it's your right to not shop there.
Go ahead and complain, boycott, and write letters. I wish you luck. Please don't ask for a ban on private use of this technology, though (I know you haven't said that, but I'm sure somebody here is thinking that).
Re:Why this differs from what Tampa is doing (Score:2)
That's because there is nothing WRONG with a "womens only "gym. Just as there would be nothing wrong with one that is "mens only".
Men and women are demonstarably different, DESPITE the mantras of the 1960's bra-burners.
But, when you start discriminating by race, where there IS no difference, then you have a problem. For one thing I'd not go anwyhere where my friends aren't welcome.
However, Borders had better be fucking certain of the accuracy of their system... The government has certain immunities against being sued, a private corp has none. I hope my local Borders mis-ID's me. In fact, why don't we all go hang around hoping for that to happen, after all, your odds of being humiliated in public by this system fucking up are a LOT better than winning the lottery.
And I'd get a tank of sharks to make sure my "lottery ticket" was cashed from Border's coffers if it happened to me.
A Halloween Masking (Score:2)
I'm only half kidding about this.
Hmmm (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Let the market decide... (Score:2)
Just like every other time this is said, this will be a classic case of people not knowing what hit them. They'll tolerate it at one chain, maybe two. People put up with a lot of shit, especially if it isn't affecting them (directly, immediately). By the time every major store jumps on the bandwagon, it'll be too late to stop it and there will be nowhere else to go.
Then, of course, everyone will wonder how this could have happened... shouldn't "the market" have "decided" against it?
Sorry, but people who think "the market", if left to itself, will "decide" on the best course of action for all involved have thoroughly ignored the glaringly obvious in the history of capitalism.
Re:Let the market decide... (Score:2)
Sure there will be. An internet bookseller has an infinately larger selection than a Borders store.
Brick and mortars have much to lose by flocking to something like this.
Re:Let the market decide... (Score:2)
Sure there will be. An internet bookseller has an infinately larger selection than a Borders store.
No, it doesn't. They both have roughly the same selection... whatever's in their supply catalogues. Besides, Amazon stands alone, but can you think of another major online bookseller that isn't tied to "brick-and-mortar" shops? One that would actually be a competitor? (Not incidentally, Barnes & Noble owns [wired.com] one of its-- and Amazon's-- biggest distributors now.)
borders.com
bn.com
booksamillion.com
chapters.ca
Even fatbrain.com is owned by Barnes & Noble.
But you're right, I'm sure "the market" will sort all of this out if we just give it time to think about it. After all, laissez-faire economics worked so well for steel, and railroads, and medicines, and meat, and waste disposal, and housing, and... oh, wait.
Time for a dead-tree /. effect! (Score:2)
I write to indicate my extreme distaste for a recent development in Borders's UK operations which I fear may rear its head on this continent as well. I refer to the use of SmartFace (or FaceIt), the face-recognition technology, in Borders retail outlets to locate known shoplifters, as reported in the British Sunday Herald newspaper on August 26. I find the use of this technology by both government and commercial agencies highly disturbing; its use is fraught with peril, and is simply too open to abuses.
If Borders proceeds to use this technology in its US retail outlets, I will no longer shop at Borders retail outlets and Borders.com, and will also inform my friends and acquaintances of the fact that they will be under this unusually obtrusive form of surveillance when they shop at Borders stores.
Sund. Explns. (Score:2)
How long do you think it will be before the only way not to cause thousands of blips in various companies' databases every time you go outside will be to live in a shack in Montana? And you will have no recourse, in the name of private property.
Yet another boycott *sigh* (Score:2)
FP
Customer care number for Borders (Score:2, Informative)
Finding known shoplifters (Score:2)
So, basically we are creating a system where the crimes of a youth could haunt those into adulthood. This isn't exactly a good thing for thge merchant. People grow up, and when they do they tent to buy things. Although I think in the long run the merchant loses out, the merchant is free to act however they please in this country. Just as I am free to not buy from them, or someone else is free to sue them for discrimination.
My biggest fear to using public records for face reconition is that you create a system where those who can afford good representation often won't be convicted when they should. Even with a Public Defender a white person is far more likely to be offered a special program that will not place the shoplifting conviction in the public record.
B) Would be to digitize ID from those caught shoplifting on tape. This has the same problem as normal CCTV. You have so much information you have to decide who you are going to concentrate on. There have been a number of shows on racial profiling in retail security over the years. Almost all have demonstrated that minorities are targeted. So when security adds faces to the database are they getting 80% of the minorities caught on tape shoplifting while at the same time getting only 30% of other groups.
While most companies have policies that are designed to avoid profiling and discrimination the fact is you cannot anticipte the how every employee is going to act.
The best idea is not to have a system that tracks peoples faces, but instead tracks the books and detects when people take them.
The really funny thing about this... (Score:2)
but will that stop pre-online browsing ? (Score:2)
Well here's an interesting thought. Having done some work in biometric identification, there are a couple of questions I'd like to see Borders answers before snappng my photo. First, who owns the data of my image ? Second, having never committed a crime more than perhaps checking out a book there before buying it from Amazon.com, are they entitled under the law to scan and process my image without my permission ?
As for the pre-online buy purchase, those of us in the D.C. area can now save a trip Borders altogether with our local ReadMeDoc.com [readmedoc.com]. THough anyone, anywhere can still enjoy their steep discounts. I know, because I'm good for at least 1 book a month from them. And the only facial scan I get is the smiling young lady at the cash register who makes everyone feel welcome.
the Problem is the Network (tm) (Score:2)
It's one thing for Borders to watch their own stores... if they license the software and maintain their own database, fine. But if a single company is selling access to a central database to multiple clients, we're on dangerous ground. One could reduce this to a weak metaphor involving neighboorhood watches or some such, but the fact remains that we're talking about something entirely new.
This is a snowball, rolling downhill. We're talking about a network effect that's capable of galvanizing a class system that's already largely in effect in the United States. Consider the social costs of commercial ostracization. Imagine an entire class of people who are barred permanently from all major stores.
Think that's a stretch? Have you noticed how hard it is for fugitives to evade detection by police agencies? Consider yourself in the same situation, always watched, an outcast... despite having (A) not committed a crime, or (B) having committed a petty crime sometime in the past, for whatever reason. Would someone who doesn't have such troubles want to spend much time with you, the branded criminal? And remember, this is not a system under public control.
I don't believe the intentions of those deploying this system are sinister-- they just want to protect what's theirs. I don't believe the technology itself can or should be stopped-- as I said before, I'm okay with Borders watching its own doors. It's the network effect, the sharing/selling/distribution of this information, that is dangerous and that we need to prevent.
Maybe it's really to spot union organizers (Score:2)
Re:Maybe it's really to spot union organizers (Score:2)
I'd imagine this will be used for MANY purposes, not to mention, marketing purposes.
All the more reason to buy your stuff online, from a reputable supplier.
This is definately a chance for the
Guess Borders lost my business (Score:2)
The average computer (which runs Doze) can't run for a week without crashing, what makes anyone think that they can accurately identify people from fuzzy photos?
I'm thinking that there is going to be a HUGE market in the near future for hats/headgear that mask your face from cameras.
Re:Guess Borders lost my business (Score:2)
All you have to do is look at my debit card statement
If you _really_ want to know why this is bad... (Score:2)
Just don't buy it at Borders...
Some Questions (Score:2)
Re:New business idea (Score:2)
After all only criminals have something to hide!!
Re:New business idea (Score:4, Interesting)
Ever been investigated by a major law enforcement group like the FBI? I have. I was completely innocent. A competitor thought that they could "level" the playing field by using some powerful friends to get the FBI on our backs.... They said we hacked their server, and since their powerful friends said so, the FBI went ape shit. They had NO EVIDENCE mind you... NONE - save for the fact that our IP addresses (static w/ reverse DNS saying exactly what company it was) turned up on their web server logs as ACCESSING the site like every one else in the world who went there.
Being the network engineer and the only one with the technical knowledlge to do it, they investigated me.
They treated me as if I was guilty until proven innocent. You think they only use those intimidation tactics in movies? HA! So yes, everyone has something to hide... not just the criminals.
(Disclaimer: For those who have read my other posts, yes, I advocate the use of carnivore and other invasive means of tracking criminals. I also advocate the opening of such tactics to public scrutiny because when used properly and under court supervision, law enforcement agencies do their jobs and do them well. I recently saw a statistic (grain of salt time) that said the FBI catches 94% of the fugitives it goes after.)
Re:New business idea (Score:2)
Far from it.
I advocate law enforcement being able to do their jobs responsibly. Responsibly means that any methods they use to catch criminals should be open to public scrutiny for two reasons: a) the public should be aware of what can and will be used against them and b) to allow weaknesses to be discovered so that the right man goes to jail and the wrong one does not.
That's what this system is about, remember? Making sure that the people who don't break the law don't get thrown in jail, and making sure those who do DO get thrown in jail.
when the jack-booted thugs of government come to take your sorry ass away at 4am, i won't miss you.
It is because of the checks and balances designed into the justice system that the jack-booted thugs WON'T come in and take my sorry ass away at 4am. We have things such as due process. Granted, that is violated at times, and when it is, I am all for finding out WHY it was violated and punishing those who violate it. Those checks and balances were what our founding fathers envisioned. The politicians today have warped that some, but we can not abandon the principals upon which this country was founded.
Re:why do we care? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:why do we care? (Score:2)
Just wait until you are kicked out of a retail store, cause the computer says you are a shoplifter. My solution is a simple one. I won't be shopping at Borders anymore.
My solution's even simpler; I just won't shoplift at Border's.
Re:why do we care? (Score:2)
What if some fuzzy CCD camera image ID's you as a shoplifter? What then? I bet you'd be suing, just as I'd do.
I'm as against stealing as you are. But what I am more against is a corp trying to play police. It's legal, but they better NOT make a mistake, as they have no exemption to civil lawsuits.
Re:why do we care? (Score:2)
How will you feel if security drags you into a backroom and starts questioning you about the book they know you stole two months ago? Luckily the software is perfect so that won't happen.
I'll refuse to come, then insist they call the police if they want to detain me. Then I'll sue them.
Re:why do we care? (Score:2)
I'll refuse to come, then insist they call the police if they want to detain me. Then I'll sue them."
EXACTLY what I'd do. A "rent a cop" has no right to detain you or question you, insist that the police be involved. That is the best way to both CYA and to maximize Borders liability when you sue them.
Re:why do we care? (Score:5, Insightful)
First they came for the Communists,
and I didn't speak up, because I wasn?t a Communist.
Then they came for the Jews,
and I didn't speak up, because I wasn?t a Jew.
Then they came for the Catholics,
and I didn't speak up, because I was a Protestant.
Then they came for me,
and by that time there was no one left to speak up for me.
by Rev. Martin Niemoller, 1945
Re:why do we care? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:why do we care? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:why do we care? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because the issue isn't whether the watchees are doing anything wrong. I'ts whether the watchers are doing anything wrong.
Enhanced surveillance technology is almost never accompanied by enhanced accoutablility for the operators of that technology. (Be it governments, corporations or spies.) These systems are being deployed with no concern for the fact that they upset balances of interest that have been carefully formed over centuries.
Those who claim that these are not new powers are wrong. The data correlation provided by networked and shared computer databases is a fundamentally new capabality. Comparing this new capability to a cop watching for known criminals on the street is like comparing a nuclear weapon to a hand grenade. At some point in the future, having your face in one of these databases will be like having an emblem sewed on your sleeve in Nazi Germany.
Re:why do we care? (Score:2)
This is not the government watching for crime; this is a store saying, we caugh you shoplifting here before, so we don't want you back.
Ummm so Borders has there OWN DB with (Score:2)
Re:why do we care? (Score:3, Insightful)
No it isn't.
This is a store buying a database from a company that peddles accusations. If the system grows in popularity and most stores implement this, the database company gains quasi-governmental powers but without the checks and balances built into governments.
Inclusion in the database (rightly or wrongly) becomes a form of extra-legal punishment, imposed regardless of any due process punishments already applied by the real government to the offender (or mistaken non-offender).
Like I said originally, it's not each individual store that's the problem. It's the network effect when all stores share accusations in real time via a secret database.
Re:why do we care? (Score:2)
Merchants do have the right to protect themselves from thieves. We all pay the higher prices from losses.
Re:why do we care? (Score:3, Interesting)
Worse, actaully... Courts tend to let newspapers skate because of the 1st Amendment. However, that protection would NOT protect a corp who mis-id'd you with a face scanner.
Courts tend to protect the press, because of the public interest in a free press. However, there is no precedent for protecting a corp in the same type of incidence.
why you should care (Score:2)
If you're in a public place, information about everything you do is public property, right? Or alternatively if you're on private property then the property owner can elect to make it public.
As long as the price is affordable, what's to stop some company from setting up several thousand cameras around the place tracking people's movements? There's no privacy in a public place - it's completely public information.
Then what's to stop such a company from on-selling specific information about any given person?
You have a right to privacy, not to obscurity. To date, obscurity is the only thing that's been protecting people in public places. When there's thousands or millions of people, tracking one person is hard.
Obviously you're not doing anything wrong, so there's no reason to worry about it. Never mind the fact that losing the obscurity that everyone's had before technology took it away could completely destroy your life. Consider all the things that might go wrong if your employer, your spouse, your children/parents, or your stalker decide to purchace information about where you've been and what you've been doing in public places.
This is why I get tired and sick to death of people who keep stating that you're safe and there's no point in worrying as long as you're not doing anything wrong. Losing privacy isn't the problem because in 9 times out of 10 the privacy people had hasn't been lost. The obscurity that nobody had an official right to but everyone took for granted has been lost.
It doesn't even take a corrupt judicial system to argue against it.
tell that to the guy in Chicago (Score:3, Interesting)
I think there is only on answer, Barnes and Nobels here I come. VOTE with your $$$$
Re:why do we care? (Score:2)
Second, if some clerk or guard follows me around in a store, I get pissed. And I never shop there again. Being automatically chased around the store by a computer doesn't make me feel any better.
Across from Borders is Starbucks. (Score:2)
I mean... In Ann Arbor, Land of a Thousand Coffee Shops, we now have Starbucks. Several of them. I mean, there were chains of coffee shops before, but also dozens of tiny ones. But this is Starbucks. And they appear to be doing well. It saddens me.
At least I can still go to the Fleetwood for good eats.
Re:Unpopular opinion (Score:2)
Re:They don't own the rights to my image (Score:2)
Re:Borders Has Lost My Business (Score:2)
Now the hard part is coming up with those catchy slogans....
Re:It's a good idea (Score:2)
Neither do I, and that's the problem. Is lots of cameras really any less of a police state than lots of police?
Being treated like a criminal is being treated like a criminal, regardless of the specifics.
No, I'm not saying that Borders can't do what they want in their own stores. But unless the government recently passed a new ammendment (guess which country I'm from), I'm still allowed to bitch and moan about their business practices and refuse to shop there.
Time to Patronize Barnes and Noble! (Score:2)
Re:Oh Great... (Score:2)
think about how hypocritical it is to mod down a message and yet be oh so passionate about freedom of speech
Er, which is it? Are we supposed to use rational thought, or are we supposed to squeal "censorship" when somebody applies an unfavorable editorial judgment?