How facial recognition is going to replace keys, passports, and tickets in the next five years

facial recognition replace things
September 30, 2024

Technology

In the next five years, we may no longer need boarding passes or passports at airports, and tickets for buses, trains, and subways could disappear. Instead, facial recognition will be used in many areas of our lives, including healthcare, to verify medical records for doctors and hospitals.

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Germany and France recently raised concerns about the EU’s new biometric border checks, set to start on November 10. These checks will require non-EU travellers, including British tourists, to go through immigration where their fingerprints and facial scans will be taken.

Jake Moore, a cybersecurity expert at ESET, says facial recognition will become a common part of daily life. But he warns that if misused, it could lead to a future like the movie ”Minority Report”, where people are monitored or even arrested before committing a crime. He also worries that stores might know who you are before you even enter.

Facial recognition technology works by taking a 3D scan of your face and measuring key features like the distance between your eyes, ears, and nose. This data is used to create a unique biometric profile for each person.

Companies like Apple have already introduced facial recognition on their devices, and schools might soon use it too. The UK is moving toward using this technology in many everyday situations, including at home, in shops, schools, and hospitals.

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Jake adds that schools could use facial recognition to take attendance, and if one school reports success in reducing crime or truancy, others might follow.

In hospitals, facial recognition could improve security by identifying patients and controlling access to different areas. Nicole Martinez-Martin from Stanford University highlights that this technology is already being used in long-term care homes in the U.S. to monitor who comes and goes.

There is also software called Face2Gene, used in the U.S., that can detect signs of rare diseases just by scanning a person’s face. This could soon be available in other countries.

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