Facebookâs ever-growing list of creepy features and policies is practically a meme at this point, but the latest product from the companyâs artificial-intelligence team really kicks things up a notch.
Facebookâs AI engineers have developed an algorithm that can identify and tag people even when their faces are not visibleâfor example, when theyâre shielding their faces to prevent being recognized. In lieu of facial features like eyes, a nose, or a mouth, the algorithm looks at hair styles, apparel, and even body posture.
âThere are a lot of cues we useâ to identify people, Yann LeCun, Facebookâs director of AI research, told New Scientist. âPeople have characteristic aspects, even if you look at them from the back. For example, you can recognise Mark Zuckerberg very easily, because he always wears a gray T-shirt.â
Ha ha ha. But LeCunâs joke in no way disguises the threat that the algorithm poses to online privacy.
For now, Facebook is still evaluating the feature. In a test run, the results of which were presented at a recent conference in Boston, the algorithm correctly identified people with 83-percent accuracy.
New Scientist notes that the algorithm would be especially useful to Facebook when paired with the companyâs newest photo-sharing service, Facebook Moments.
Weâve reached out to Facebook for comment on the facial recognition systemâs implications and will update if we hear back.
Illustration by Max Fleishman