AI facial recognition tech brings ‘airport-style security’ to UK stores, says human rights group
AI facial recognition tech brings ‘airport-style security’ to UK stores, says human rights group · CNN Business

A rising number of British stores are using a facial recognition system powered by artificial intelligence to identify repeat shoplifters in what one human rights group has called the spread of “airport-style security” on the high street.

Simon Gordon, founder of UK surveillance company Facewatch, told CNN that demand for his product had grown “exponentially” as the incidence of shoplifting and violence in stores has soared in recent years.

“We’re just here trying to prevent crime,” he said.

It works like this: Once a store manager knows an item has been stolen — for instance, when taking an inventory of their stock — they will review the footage recorded by their security cameras to identify the thief.

Then, the manager will log into Facewatch’s system, which will have also taken video of all the customers who entered the store that day, to find the suspect in the firm’s footage and log the incident.

Facewatch uses a digital camera to compare images of anyone entering the store against a database of images of individuals that could be a threat to the store, its staff or customers.  - Stephen Bell/Alamy Stock Photo
Facewatch uses a digital camera to compare images of anyone entering the store against a database of images of individuals that could be a threat to the store, its staff or customers. - Stephen Bell/Alamy Stock Photo

“We then review the incident, make sure it describes the suspected crime or disorder and then we set it live,” Gordon said. Any time the same person tries to enter that store again, the manager will receive an alert on their phone, and can ask the person to leave, or keep a close eye on them.

Before the alert is sent, one of Facewatch’s human “super-recognizers” double-checks that the suspect’s face matches one in the firm’s database of offenders.

If that person is either a prolific offender or has stolen something worth more than £100 ($131), their biometric data could also be shared with other stores in the local area that use Facewatch’s system.

Human rights groups say this type of technology flouts people’s right to privacy and often makes mistakes.

“Something like Facewatch is basically normalizing what is airport-style security [for] something as mundane as going to get a pint of milk at the shops,” Madeleine Stone, senior advocacy officer at Big Brother Watch, a UK civil liberties campaign group, told CNN.

Recording shoppers’ biometric data is the equivalent to asking them to “hand over their fingerprint or even a DNA sample just to walk into the shops.”

‘Not infallible’

Gordon, who also runs London’s oldest wine bar, said the system was accurate 99.85% of the time last month in identifying repeat offenders.

But mistakes do sometimes happen, he added. In those cases, the person incorrectly flagged as an offender can complain to Facewatch, and have their details wiped from the system.

“Sometimes you’ll get maybe someone who’s a doppelganger for someone else,” Gordon said, which will result in an incorrect alert. That’s happened “a few times,” although, once aware of the error, the company “immediately” deletes the person’s details.