
Mandates disappear, but mask detection tech has left its mark
During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, when mask mandates became commonplace both in public and in private, tech vendors began selling products they claimed could detect whether someone was wearing a mask â or not. With press releases and flashy demonstrations, the vendors attracted the attention of critics skeptical about the solutionsâ capabilities and potential surveillance applications. Allied Market Research optimistically predicted that the market would be worth over $1 billion by 2027.
Now, as mask mandates lift in countries around the world â if prematurely, according to some health experts â the dust is beginning to settle. While the demand for mask detection technologies is steadily declining, the products have had far-reaching effects, with implications for privacy and security, interviews with vendors suggest.
For example, Shaun Moore, the CEO of Trueface, says he doesnât see customers that have already purchased Truefaceâs mask detection technology winding down their usage anytime soon. Like many of the vendors delivering mask detection as a service, Trueface, which was acquired by biometric security company Pangiam in 2021, came from a facial recognition background. The company got its start applying algorithms to camera footage to extract an abundance of data, including license plate recognition and object detection, before broadening its focus to biometrics.
âWe started developing both mask detection and the ability to do face recognition with a mask around April of 2020, following the outbreak of COVID-19 in the U.S. Roughly 50% of our customers asked that we update our software with mask detection so they could programmatically tell their customers to pull down their mask,â Moore told TechCrunch via email. âWe plan to keep mask detection and recognition with a mask on as part of our [product] in the event they are needed again.â
As regular readers of this site are well aware, facial recognition is a flash point for controversy. While companies like Trueface claim that they engage only in âresponsibleâ deployments of the technology, recent history is filled with examples of facial recognition abuse, such as software developed by Huawei and others to recognize members of the targeted Uyghur minority group. Numerous studies, including the landmark Gender Shades project, have also shown facial recognition technologies to be susceptible to various biases, including gender, racial and ethnic biases. Police have made several wrongful arrests of Black suspects based on faulty facial recognition evidence.
Trueface declined to name which customers are currently using its mask detection and facial recognition products, but the company previously won a contract from the U.S. Air Force to âsecure base access and safety.â
Motorola Solutions, another vendor that began providing mask detection products during the pandemic, says that any customer that purchased its Avigilon Control Center 7 (ACC7) video management software and the necessary hardware can still access its mask detection technology free of charge. (ACC7 is maintained by Avigilon, a Canadian surveillance camera company that Motorola Solutions acquired in March 2018.) Motorola Solutions didnât supply a customer list when asked, but according to NBC, Avigilon at one point had contracts with school districts, police departments and housing authorities in the U.S.
â[Our] âNo Face Mask Detectionâ technology is a video-based detection technology that is able to ⊠detect objects in the cameraâs field of view, classify them as humans, and determine whether the subject is not wearing a mask,â Motorola Solutions spokesperson Elizabeth Skube told TechCrunch in an email. âIn addition to alerts for security operators, users can generate enterprise-wide reports with statistical analysis over time to help employers address concerns ⊠For now, the feature will remain available for customers to turn off or continue to use at their discretion.â
Like Motorola Solutions, Rhombus Systems, a security system supplier headquartered in Sacramento, California, began including face mask detection as a part of its standard platform several months ago (in January 2021). Companies can use it to receive alerts via push notification or email whenever the system detects that someone isnât wearing a mask, CEO Garrett Larsson told TechCrunch via email.
âWe know that we have a handful of customers that use it, but it never became a highly used feature,â Larsson said via email. âWe have no immediate plans to sunset the feature, but itâs something that weâll continually monitor based on whether it looks like mask mandates will return or not.â
In a press release last October, Rhombus claimed to count school districts, healthcare providers, city governments and Fortune 500 companies among its customers.
Alerting features like those that Motorola Solutions and Rhombus offer are of concern to privacy experts, who worry that the technologies will normalize greater levels of surveillance â giving managers ammunition to punish disfavored employees. Amazon notoriously uses algorithms to audit warehouse worker productivity at a granular level, dinging workers for spending too much time away from scanning barcodes or sorting products into bins.
Coincidentally, Amazon a year ago made a big to-do out of a technology called Distance Assistant that the company developed to monitor warehouse workersâ compliance with social distancing rules. Distance Assistant remains available for Amazon warehouse managers to use, but itâs no longer required, spokesperson Barbara Agrait told TechCrunch via email, reflecting newer guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Other vendors like Montevideo, Uruguay-based Tryolabs have applied these types of technologies to more public venues, including brick-and-mortar stores. An AI consultancy, Tryolabs developed a mask detection product dubbed MaskCam that generates statistics about mask usage in real time. Co-founder and COO Ernesto RodrĂguez says that interest has faded compared to the pandemicâs early days, but that MaskCam was at one point set up in Bozeman Montana Airport in Belgrade, Montana to count people walking by and determine the percentage of them wearing a mask.
âSince the interest in this particular solution is declining, Tryolabs continues to focus on researching other problems based on the same core technologies. The models and technologies developed for this particular solution can be applied to other use cases,â RodrĂguez told TechCrunch via email. âThe same libraries can be used and customized in other visual AI solutions, such as in retail, to count the number of people entering and exiting physical stores, or in logistics and supply chain for predictive maintenance scenarios.â
Mission creep has been one of the defining themes of the pandemic where it concerns the tech industry, as evidenced by the sales of facial recognition temperature kiosks with dubious effectiveness (not to mention location-tracking apps). If it wasnât clear before, hindsight reveals that mask detection was a Trojan horse for more problematic technologies, including surveillance technologies, in the workplace and elsewhere.
As the American Civil Liberties Union notes: âOverbroad efforts to curb and track COVID-19 leave the door open to an abiding surveillance apparatus that wonât be dissolved once the public emergency dust settles ⊠We have a duty to ensure that temporary COVID-19 data surveillance infrastructures do not take hold to outlast the effects of this once-in-a-century pandemic.â
The need for face mask detection â if there ever truly was one â will eventually go away. But customers who purchased the technology might be inclined to keep it for less ethical purposes.
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