Surveillance systems incorrectly and without customer consent marked shoppers as ‘persons of interest’, an FTC settlement says
Rite Aid used facial recognition systems to identify shoppers that were previously deemed “likely to engage” in shoplifting without customer consent and misidentified people – particularly women and Black, Latino or Asian people – on “numerous” occasions, according to a new settlement with the Federal Trade Commission. As part of the settlement, Rite Aid has been forbidden from deploying facial recognition technology in its stores for five years.
The FTC said in a federal court complaint that Rite Aid used facial recognition technology in hundreds of stores from October 2012 to July 2020 to identify shoppers “it had previously deemed likely to engage in shoplifting or other criminal behavior”. The technology sent alerts to Rite Aid employees either by email or phone when it identified people entering the store on its watchlist.
This article was amended on 21 December 2023 to correct a misspelling of John Davisson’s name.
More Stories
Canadian company in negotiations with Trump to mine seabed
Australian house prices hit new peak as rate cut drives buyer demand
Hyundai facing legal action over car that can be stolen ‘effortlessly in seconds’