Adoption of the tech has civil liberties advocates alarmed, especially as the government vows to expand surveillance of protesters and students.
Police and federal agencies have found a controversial new way to skirt the growing patchwork of laws that curb how they use facial recognition: an AI model that can track people using attributes like body size, gender, hair color and style, clothing, and accessories.
How is this new? I thought gait (walking style) analysis already covered identifying people without a clear face, and that there were already automated tools for it.
This just seems like a tool to use as an excuse to nab the wrong person because they looked or dressed similar.
Probably more about what they're turning to rather than it being new. The main issue is that all of these tools are very hit or miss (facial is probably the best, but also really just a "close enough" given most camera angles/quality being used are meh).
Gait tracking isn't new. But doing this goes against the spirit of the antifacialrecog laws. Unless lawmakers enforce that part of the interpretation, then they're allowing a very dangerous precedent (which, I'm assuming, they know and intend).
You'll be fine, it's like when people get worried about wearing red or blue or other "gang colors", context matters. The -- in your case pants -- that you're wearing needs to be combined with a bunch of other markers to signal yourself as a Nazi