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Germany Says Facebook's Facial Recognition Is Illegal

fysdt writes "Although we think it's generally a pretty nifty feature, valid concerns over the misuse of Facebook's auto-recognition tagging have lead Germany to ban it entirely. That's right — Facebook in its current state is now illegal. The German government, which possesses perhaps the world's most adamant privacy laws as a result of postwar abuse, considers Facebook's facial recognition a violation of 'the right to anonymity.'"

7 of 278 comments (clear)

  1. GO GERMANS by tenshihan · · Score: 5, Funny

    That shit is orwellian in how scary it is. You there, in 12b. Do more push-ups. Your facebook photos are getting fatter.

    1. Re:GO GERMANS by drolli · · Score: 5, Informative

      It should be noted how that works. In Germany every institution which processes personal data has to have a "Datenschutzbeauftragter" (Personal privacy protection responsible), ans this since the early 90s (as far as i remember). And there are one of these for each of the Countries in Germany.

      As fas as i understand the west German strong movement and awareness for the issue arose in 1987 census, which caused a lot of work for the courts and polarized the population against government data collection. Before that the "Rasterfahndung" (a sieving of registration office and other data to find terrorism suspects) in the 1970s deepened the split between the different political views in Germany (IMHO prolonging the support for the terroristic "red army fraction" in the population). About former East Germany it can only be said that people who were spied upon all the time and having disadvantaged in life if saying privately the wrong thing may not feel very well about being tracked.

      Last but not least one of the first large-scale usage of automated population databases (on Hollerith puchcards) in Germany was the organization of the Holocaust.

      All these are good reasons that Germany should be extra-careful about data collections. And germans should be, too, but every time i stand in the shop at the cashier is am asked if i use a customer point card (which then would probably allow the company behind to correlate my buying of underwear with the books i buy).

      I for my part can only say that i am lucky that i forbid even friends to put photos of me to an uncontrolled space in the Internet. There is only a

  2. My right of notbeingrecognized is being recognized by kasnol · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Finally someone recognizes the right of "not being recognized without consent".

  3. Just the facial recognition component? by wickerprints · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The whole damn site is a privacy violation. I don't even use FB and I know that there are photos of me floating around on there, tagged by my so-called "friends." Short of being a hermit, I have no way to stop people from uploading data that identifies me to a site that makes money by exploiting that knowledge to sell shit.

    1. Re:Just the facial recognition component? by HellYeahAutomaton · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If they snapped a photo of you while you were walking down the street, deal with it because that is a public space and anyone could have done that.

      The problem here is how people will deal with it:
      a) The native American who doesn't want their soul stolen.
      b) The wanna-be fashion diva who claims you didn't get their release, and you are stealing their IP, livelihood, etc.
      c) Or the guy who just wants to kick your ass because he doesn't want photos around that he didn't consent.

      People in general have a reasonable expectation of privacy everywhere they go despite what all of the social media douchebags think. When you click that photo, you best be sure you know how to defend yourself, because you do not know how people are going to react.

    2. Re:Just the facial recognition component? by Kagetsuki · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Ditto. And I get constant e-mails from Facebook because my friends decided to import their address books and now Facebook knows me. What's amazing is that my dead uncle who I only met once in person while living, his account still exists and Facebook keeps telling me he "wants to reconnect" with me. Yeah, I'm never signing up.

    3. Re:Just the facial recognition component? by Pieroxy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You are missing the point by about a hundred thousand miles. What happens in real life cannot be cross connected and searched on in a fraction of a second. What computers brought to the picture is this ability. Cross the social security database with Facebook and Google databases and you've got a tool that is all dictators wet dreams.

      Of course, nothing more than being recognized in the street. Except it is a lot more.

      In France, we have a state-backed organism that basically prevents any private database from using a key from another database. It also forces companies to delete or update your account if you wish (it's the law that YOU have control over YOUR data even if it's in some companies database.)

      It's a bit harder to build databases. Sure, using the SSN to identify everyone resolves a lot os issues, but that's strictly forbidden. As a result, identity theft is a concept that doesn't exist in France.

      The fact that anyone can recognize you in the street is *not* equivalent to random people tagging you on Facebook.