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Meta's Secret Face ID Removed After Exposure
9 Jun
Summary
- Meta quietly removed unreleased face recognition from its AI app.
- The system, known as NameTag, could identify faces via smart glasses.
- Privacy advocates demand stronger consumer protection laws.

Meta has recently removed substantial portions of an unreleased face-recognition system, codenamed NameTag, from its Meta AI companion app. This action followed a report revealing the system's presence within the app, which has been installed on over 50 million phones. The NameTag feature was designed to convert faces captured by Meta's smart glasses into unique biometric signatures, or faceprints, and compare them against a local database. Faces that the system failed to recognize were also reportedly cropped, indexed, and stored locally for future processing.
While Meta's vice president of communications stated the feature was exploratory and no final decision had been made, the company had previously downplayed the reporting. Privacy advocates, such as Kade Crockford of the ACLU of Massachusetts, argue that such actions highlight the urgent need for stronger consumer privacy legislation. Crockford emphasized that companies like Meta prioritize profits, necessitating robust legal enforcement to protect consumer data and privacy, particularly with features that could be misused for surveillance or identification of individuals in public spaces.