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Facial Recognition Technology at the Valley?
Comments
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I assume those who don't agree with it don't use the e-gates in airports either1
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OhMyGodden said:I assume those who don't agree with it don't use the e-gates in airports either2
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I have never really taken much notice before but got some cash out today and my face was on the screen via a camera and then popped into M&S and there I was again, on the screen when I tapped my card.0
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valleynick66 said:Chizz said:If you walk past dozens of police officers, some with cameras, to go to a football match, with potentially dozens of cameras, some of which are pointing at the crowd and public-access areas, and sit next to thousands of fans holding video cameras and you have a season ticket - which you have to show - with your name on it, linked to your email address, home address, bank details and more, and you're not banned from the stadium or a wanted criminal, why would you be worried about being recognised on a camera that's specifically there to find criminals, law-breakers and others who may be breaking, bending or ignoring rules?
Every time you go to a football match, if you're a season ticket holder, you can be tracked, traced, filmed, photographed, witnessed. Why would one more, effective means of weeding out wrong'uns be a problem to those that aren't wrong'uns?
increased usage.0 -
Chizz said:valleynick66 said:Chizz said:If you walk past dozens of police officers, some with cameras, to go to a football match, with potentially dozens of cameras, some of which are pointing at the crowd and public-access areas, and sit next to thousands of fans holding video cameras and you have a season ticket - which you have to show - with your name on it, linked to your email address, home address, bank details and more, and you're not banned from the stadium or a wanted criminal, why would you be worried about being recognised on a camera that's specifically there to find criminals, law-breakers and others who may be breaking, bending or ignoring rules?
Every time you go to a football match, if you're a season ticket holder, you can be tracked, traced, filmed, photographed, witnessed. Why would one more, effective means of weeding out wrong'uns be a problem to those that aren't wrong'uns?
increased usage.I agree with you. I see no issue with it at a football ground and no additional challenges occur to me than already exist.0 -
valleynick66 said:Chizz said:valleynick66 said:Chizz said:If you walk past dozens of police officers, some with cameras, to go to a football match, with potentially dozens of cameras, some of which are pointing at the crowd and public-access areas, and sit next to thousands of fans holding video cameras and you have a season ticket - which you have to show - with your name on it, linked to your email address, home address, bank details and more, and you're not banned from the stadium or a wanted criminal, why would you be worried about being recognised on a camera that's specifically there to find criminals, law-breakers and others who may be breaking, bending or ignoring rules?
Every time you go to a football match, if you're a season ticket holder, you can be tracked, traced, filmed, photographed, witnessed. Why would one more, effective means of weeding out wrong'uns be a problem to those that aren't wrong'uns?
increased usage.I agree with you. I see no issue with it at a football ground and no additional challenges occur to me than already exist.0 -
Chizz said:valleynick66 said:Chizz said:valleynick66 said:Chizz said:If you walk past dozens of police officers, some with cameras, to go to a football match, with potentially dozens of cameras, some of which are pointing at the crowd and public-access areas, and sit next to thousands of fans holding video cameras and you have a season ticket - which you have to show - with your name on it, linked to your email address, home address, bank details and more, and you're not banned from the stadium or a wanted criminal, why would you be worried about being recognised on a camera that's specifically there to find criminals, law-breakers and others who may be breaking, bending or ignoring rules?
Every time you go to a football match, if you're a season ticket holder, you can be tracked, traced, filmed, photographed, witnessed. Why would one more, effective means of weeding out wrong'uns be a problem to those that aren't wrong'uns?
increased usage.I agree with you. I see no issue with it at a football ground and no additional challenges occur to me than already exist.
I thought however this part of my post did address your question: ‘I see no issue with it at a football ground and no additional challenges occur to me than already exist. ‘
I think you are being rather pedantic if that doesn’t address ‘why does one more …be a problem..’ etc.
But for the sake of clarity in my view the answer is I can’t see why anyone would be worried / there would be a problem.0 -
PopIcon said:Fecal recognition would be more useful given the recent glut of shit talking on Charlton Life.1
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valleynick66 said:Chizz said:valleynick66 said:Chizz said:valleynick66 said:Chizz said:If you walk past dozens of police officers, some with cameras, to go to a football match, with potentially dozens of cameras, some of which are pointing at the crowd and public-access areas, and sit next to thousands of fans holding video cameras and you have a season ticket - which you have to show - with your name on it, linked to your email address, home address, bank details and more, and you're not banned from the stadium or a wanted criminal, why would you be worried about being recognised on a camera that's specifically there to find criminals, law-breakers and others who may be breaking, bending or ignoring rules?
Every time you go to a football match, if you're a season ticket holder, you can be tracked, traced, filmed, photographed, witnessed. Why would one more, effective means of weeding out wrong'uns be a problem to those that aren't wrong'uns?
increased usage.I agree with you. I see no issue with it at a football ground and no additional challenges occur to me than already exist.
I thought however this part of my post did address your question: ‘I see no issue with it at a football ground and no additional challenges occur to me than already exist. ‘
I think you are being rather pedantic if that doesn’t address ‘why does one more …be a problem..’ etc.
But for the sake of clarity in my view the answer is I can’t see why anyone would be worried / there would be a problem.
But you don't seem to understand or accept that some people DO have a problem with it - which is also fine.1 -
valleynick66 said:ShootersHillGuru said:valleynick66 said:ShootersHillGuru said:bobmunro said:Live Facial Recognition Technology should not be confused with CCTV. Some interesting points here:Given this sustained pressure, it is striking that no dedicated legal framework has yet been introduced. In the absence of clear statutory safeguards, the expansion of LFR risks undermining public trust, eroding civil liberties, and enabling discriminatory surveillance practices. To navigate the delicate balance between public safety and civil liberties, any deployment of such surveillance tools must be transparent, accountable, and rooted in law.There needs to be consultation (which is all the FSA is calling for), meaningful dialogue with law enforcement agencies and the ICO, and there needs to be legislation to regulate its use.
I just can’t immediately think of a disadvantage.
The point I’m trying to make but which you don’t seem to address is what’s unique about using it a football ground that is the worry?Why aren’t you concerned that Morrisons supermarket may use it by comparison ?
Or are you voicing concerns more generally only and in which case it’s not a football specific thing?
I’ve not seen a concern that is specific to football when we already share many details with them.
London 1914 - Munich 1936 - East Berlin 1966 - Kiev 2022 - Belfast any time?
It occurs to me how easy it has always been to suddenly become a criminal "wrong- un".
Jewish, gay, trans, catholic, Muslim, black, fat white male, childless female, adulterer, disabled, out of work, book lover, climate change denier or a partner / friend /acquaintance of any of the above.
Who knows what will happen in England - whose side will we be on? Hopefully the same one!
Anyway I'd like it if football was somewhere anyone can go as anonymously as reasonably possible without giving away where they are and who they're with to whoever happens to call themselves the "police" at the time.
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stevexreeve said:valleynick66 said:ShootersHillGuru said:valleynick66 said:ShootersHillGuru said:bobmunro said:Live Facial Recognition Technology should not be confused with CCTV. Some interesting points here:Given this sustained pressure, it is striking that no dedicated legal framework has yet been introduced. In the absence of clear statutory safeguards, the expansion of LFR risks undermining public trust, eroding civil liberties, and enabling discriminatory surveillance practices. To navigate the delicate balance between public safety and civil liberties, any deployment of such surveillance tools must be transparent, accountable, and rooted in law.There needs to be consultation (which is all the FSA is calling for), meaningful dialogue with law enforcement agencies and the ICO, and there needs to be legislation to regulate its use.
I just can’t immediately think of a disadvantage.
The point I’m trying to make but which you don’t seem to address is what’s unique about using it a football ground that is the worry?Why aren’t you concerned that Morrisons supermarket may use it by comparison ?
Or are you voicing concerns more generally only and in which case it’s not a football specific thing?
I’ve not seen a concern that is specific to football when we already share many details with them.
London 1914 - Munich 1936 - East Berlin 1966 - Kiev 2022 - Belfast any time?
It occurs to me how easy it has always been to suddenly become a criminal "wrong- un".
Jewish, gay, trans, catholic, Muslim, black, fat white male, childless female, adulterer, disabled, out of work, book lover, climate change denier or a partner / friend /acquaintance of any of the above.
Who knows what will happen in England - whose side will we be on? Hopefully the same one!
Anyway I'd like it if football was somewhere anyone can go as anonymously as reasonably possible without giving away where they are and who they're with to whoever happens to call themselves the "police" at the time.
But, to ensure that, it's the law that needs to be kept in check, not the means of policing it. In other words, it should never be criminal to be a Muslim. But CCTC, or face recognition technology, should be used, legally, to find people - whatever their background - who are wanted criminals. It's not the technology that needs to be "righted", it's the law.0 -
stevexreeve said:valleynick66 said:ShootersHillGuru said:valleynick66 said:ShootersHillGuru said:bobmunro said:Live Facial Recognition Technology should not be confused with CCTV. Some interesting points here:Given this sustained pressure, it is striking that no dedicated legal framework has yet been introduced. In the absence of clear statutory safeguards, the expansion of LFR risks undermining public trust, eroding civil liberties, and enabling discriminatory surveillance practices. To navigate the delicate balance between public safety and civil liberties, any deployment of such surveillance tools must be transparent, accountable, and rooted in law.There needs to be consultation (which is all the FSA is calling for), meaningful dialogue with law enforcement agencies and the ICO, and there needs to be legislation to regulate its use.
I just can’t immediately think of a disadvantage.
The point I’m trying to make but which you don’t seem to address is what’s unique about using it a football ground that is the worry?Why aren’t you concerned that Morrisons supermarket may use it by comparison ?
Or are you voicing concerns more generally only and in which case it’s not a football specific thing?
I’ve not seen a concern that is specific to football when we already share many details with them.
London 1914 - Munich 1936 - East Berlin 1966 - Kiev 2022 - Belfast any time?
It occurs to me how easy it has always been to suddenly become a criminal "wrong- un".
Jewish, gay, trans, catholic, Muslim, black, fat white male, childless female, adulterer, disabled, out of work, book lover, climate change denier or a partner / friend /acquaintance of any of the above.
Who knows what will happen in England - whose side will we be on? Hopefully the same one!
Anyway I'd like it if football was somewhere anyone can go as anonymously as reasonably possible without giving away where they are and who they're with to whoever happens to call themselves the "police" at the time.
Munich 1936 ?
Berlin 1966 Funeral in Berlin?
No idea on the other two @stevexreeve0 -
Chizz said:stevexreeve said:valleynick66 said:ShootersHillGuru said:valleynick66 said:ShootersHillGuru said:bobmunro said:Live Facial Recognition Technology should not be confused with CCTV. Some interesting points here:Given this sustained pressure, it is striking that no dedicated legal framework has yet been introduced. In the absence of clear statutory safeguards, the expansion of LFR risks undermining public trust, eroding civil liberties, and enabling discriminatory surveillance practices. To navigate the delicate balance between public safety and civil liberties, any deployment of such surveillance tools must be transparent, accountable, and rooted in law.There needs to be consultation (which is all the FSA is calling for), meaningful dialogue with law enforcement agencies and the ICO, and there needs to be legislation to regulate its use.
I just can’t immediately think of a disadvantage.
The point I’m trying to make but which you don’t seem to address is what’s unique about using it a football ground that is the worry?Why aren’t you concerned that Morrisons supermarket may use it by comparison ?
Or are you voicing concerns more generally only and in which case it’s not a football specific thing?
I’ve not seen a concern that is specific to football when we already share many details with them.
London 1914 - Munich 1936 - East Berlin 1966 - Kiev 2022 - Belfast any time?
It occurs to me how easy it has always been to suddenly become a criminal "wrong- un".
Jewish, gay, trans, catholic, Muslim, black, fat white male, childless female, adulterer, disabled, out of work, book lover, climate change denier or a partner / friend /acquaintance of any of the above.
Who knows what will happen in England - whose side will we be on? Hopefully the same one!
Anyway I'd like it if football was somewhere anyone can go as anonymously as reasonably possible without giving away where they are and who they're with to whoever happens to call themselves the "police" at the time.
But, to ensure that, it's the law that needs to be kept in check, not the means of policing it. In other words, it should never be criminal to be a Muslim. But CCTC, or face recognition technology, should be used, legally, to find people - whatever their background - who are wanted criminals. It's not the technology that needs to be "righted", it's the law.
To bring it back to the original topic, the FSA clearly want to know whose hands fans data will be in and what it will be used for. I think those are fair questions to ask of any football club, especially one who had a big cyber attack last year.0 -
Henry Irving said:stevexreeve said:valleynick66 said:ShootersHillGuru said:valleynick66 said:ShootersHillGuru said:bobmunro said:Live Facial Recognition Technology should not be confused with CCTV. Some interesting points here:Given this sustained pressure, it is striking that no dedicated legal framework has yet been introduced. In the absence of clear statutory safeguards, the expansion of LFR risks undermining public trust, eroding civil liberties, and enabling discriminatory surveillance practices. To navigate the delicate balance between public safety and civil liberties, any deployment of such surveillance tools must be transparent, accountable, and rooted in law.There needs to be consultation (which is all the FSA is calling for), meaningful dialogue with law enforcement agencies and the ICO, and there needs to be legislation to regulate its use.
I just can’t immediately think of a disadvantage.
The point I’m trying to make but which you don’t seem to address is what’s unique about using it a football ground that is the worry?Why aren’t you concerned that Morrisons supermarket may use it by comparison ?
Or are you voicing concerns more generally only and in which case it’s not a football specific thing?
I’ve not seen a concern that is specific to football when we already share many details with them.
London 1914 - Munich 1936 - East Berlin 1966 - Kiev 2022 - Belfast any time?
It occurs to me how easy it has always been to suddenly become a criminal "wrong- un".
Jewish, gay, trans, catholic, Muslim, black, fat white male, childless female, adulterer, disabled, out of work, book lover, climate change denier or a partner / friend /acquaintance of any of the above.
Who knows what will happen in England - whose side will we be on? Hopefully the same one!
Anyway I'd like it if football was somewhere anyone can go as anonymously as reasonably possible without giving away where they are and who they're with to whoever happens to call themselves the "police" at the time.
Munich 1936 ?
Berlin 1966 Funeral in Berlin?
No idea on the other two @stevexreeve
The factual bits of both are "literally" incredible while the fictional bits are merely unbelievable!
Sorry - the other locations and dates are just from various books I've read where the existence of special "laws" and "police" (Gestapo - Stasi - KPG - who knows what in Belfast?) have made it a good idea for anyone to be as anonymous as possible!0