Germany tests facial recognition technology at rail station

ABC News

German authorities have launched a six-month test of automatic facial recognition technology at a Berlin railway station, which the country’s top security official says could be used to improve security in the future.

More than 200 people volunteered to have their names and two photos stored for the project at Suedkreuz station, where three cameras film an entrance and an escalator. 

Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said in a statement Tuesday “technical progress must not stop at our security services.”

But Germans generally back strong data protection. Ulrich Schellenberg, head of the German Bar Association, said “not everything that is technically possible is something we want to do as a society.”

It’s not clear how officials will proceed after the test.

http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory/germany-tests-facial-recognition-technology-rail-station-48963623

2 thoughts on “Germany tests facial recognition technology at rail station

  1. Hopefully the test fails, as so many similar tests have over the years.

    As recently as January of this year it was reported that testing of another system in Russia — reportedly one of the most advanced in the world — showed the system to be surprisingly inaccurate.

    1. “… showed the system to be surprisingly inaccurate.’

      No doubt, BMF.

      But it DID create a market… and jobs. Not sure that they really give a sh#t about accuracy.

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