LifestyleRite Aid Banned from Using Facial Recognition for Five Years

Rite Aid Banned from Using Facial Recognition for Five Years

Great News! Rite Aid is banned from utilizing ‍facial recognition programs within any of its stores ‍for⁤ the next five years. The pharmacy retail ⁤chain agreed to the ​ban as ​part of a Federal Trade Commission settlement regarding “reckless use”⁢ of the surveillance technology which‌ “left its customers facing humiliation and other‌ harms,”​ according to⁢ Samuel Levine, Director of the ​FTC’s Bureau ⁣of Consumer Protection.

“Today’s groundbreaking order makes clear that ⁢the⁤ Commission will be ⁤vigilant in protecting the public ⁤from unfair biometric⁢ surveillance‍ and unfair data security practices,” Levine continued in the FTC’s December ⁤19 announcement.

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[Related: Startup claims biometric scanning can make a ‘secure’ gun.]

According to regulators, the⁣ pharmacy‌ chain tested a pilot program of facial identification camera systems within an estimated 200 stores between⁣ 2012 and 2020. FTC states that Rite Aid “falsely flagged the consumers as matching ‌someone who had previously⁢ been identified as a shoplifter or other ⁢troublemaker.” While meant to deter and help‍ prosecute instances of retail​ theft, the FTC documents numerous incidents in which the technology mistakenly identified customers as suspected shoplifters, ‍resulting in unwarranted searches⁢ and even police dispatches.

In one⁢ instance, Rite Aid employees called the police on a ​Black customer‍ after⁣ the system flagged their face—despite the image on file depicting a “white lady with blonde hair,” ​cites FTC commissioner Alvaro Bedoya in an accompanying statement. Another account involved the unwarranted search of an 11-year-old girl, leaving her “distraught.”

“Rite Aid’s facial recognition technology was more ⁤likely to generate ​false​ positives in stores located in plurality-Black and Asian communities than ⁢in⁤ plurality-White communities,” the⁣ FTC ⁤added.

“We are pleased to⁣ reach an‌ agreement with the FTC and put⁤ this matter ​behind us,”⁤ Rite Aid‍ representatives wrote in an ​ official ⁣statement on Tuesday. Although the company stated it respects the FTC’s inquiry ‌and reiterated the chain’s support ⁢of protecting consumer privacy, they “fundamentally disagree⁣ with the facial recognition allegations in the agency’s complaint.”

Rite Aid also contends “only a⁣ limited number of stores” deployed ⁣technology, and says ⁢its⁣ support⁤ for the⁢ facial recognition program ended in 2020.

“It’s really good that the FTC is recognizing the dangers of facial‌ recognition… ⁢ [as well as] the problematic ways that these technologies are deployed,”⁣ says ⁢Hayley Tsukayama, ‍Associate Director of ‍Legislative Activism at the digital privacy advocacy ⁢group, Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Tsukayama also believes the FTC highlighting‍ Rite Aid’s disproportionate facial scanning in nonwhite, historically ⁤over-surveilled communities underscores‌ the need for more ‍comprehensive data privacy regulations.

“Rite Aid was deploying this⁤ technology ⁤in… ⁢a lot of communities that are over-surveilled, historically. With all the false positives, that means that it has ​a​ really disturbing, different impact ⁢on people of color,” she says.

In addition to the five year prohibition on employing facial identification, Rite Aid⁣ must delete any collected ‍images and photos of consumers, » …
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