Meta? It’s still Facebook to me and this move just proves that a dumpster fire by any other name would still smell as sickly. The company’s not stopping the use of facial recognition. Nor is it deleting facial recognition data for more than a billion users. It’s deleting some very specific facial recognition templates — those used to automatically tag people in photos on Facebook. There’s nothing in the announcement today that would indicate it’s actually deleting the company’s image data or ceasing the use of facial recognition altogether. Facebook’s a lot of things, but stupid isn’t one of them. The powers that be at Meta (still catching up? Read this) can surely see the writing on the wall. And there’s three things that everyone needs to be aware of when parsing today’s news:
Old things first
The name change, the paradigm change, the whole “Metaverse” thing… it’s all part of a shift towards something more esoteric. Facebook cut its teeth imagining the future. Where everyone else saw a way to rate college women on there appearances, Mark Zuckerberg saw a way to… rate everyone on their appearances. And, along the way, he stumbled into creating the modern social network. As the platform grew into prominence it essentially replaced late night phone conversations and SMS text messages as the youthful consumer’s platform of choice on which to “hang out” with friends and family when they couldn’t be together. Some of us grew up with three-way calling and AIM groups, others on Facebook and Instagram. Zuckerberg and the rest of the Meta gang want to capture the zeitgeist of change again. And where they think everything is going, the company won’t need facial recognition.
The Metaverse
A lot of pundits are struggling to describe the Metaverse idea. Right now, it feels like anything with cartoon avatars representing people in real time is being called a metaverse and that’s pretty weird. To put things into a different perspective, perhaps it’s time we stopped looking at the metaverse as a place you go or even as a VR/AR/MR technology. When the internet took off people also thought of it like a place. Where we used to “surf the web” as an activity, now we’re watching Netflix, browsing Wikipedia, reading the news, or any number of activities. You can push a button on your phoneand get a pizza, a driver, or a sack of top-shelf cannabis (in some places) sent directly to your front door. There is no more offline and online. The internet isn’t a place, it’s a thing; a tool we use. And that’s what the Metaverse is going to shape up to be as well. The advent of cryptocurrency and NFTs has made the digital world, arguably, more lucrative than the “real” one. Where savvy investing under traditional paradigms can be difficult for those without seven-digit war chests, the emerging world of digital commodities promises a gold rush the likes of which we haven’t seen since the dotcom bubble was fully-inflated. We’ll just leave that comparison hanging out there.
Self regulation
And that brings us to the cherry on the top of this crap sundae. The language Meta uses throughout its press release makes it clear that this is a marketing scheme. There’s no upside to spending company time and resources developing yesterday’s technologies. Facial recognition is mostly useful as an on-device technology and Facebook doesn’t sell phones. In fact, quite the opposite, it’s heavily-investing in headsets and glasses that it hopes you’ll cover your face up with. The Metaverse isn’t about storing or sharing your family’s photographs. It’s about digital ownership. However, there’s some value in convincing people you’ve done something for the greater good. And Meta’s trying to frame this as part of its rebrand. In its press release on updating its facial recognition policies, it mentions a lack of government regulation several times. Yet never once does it explain why the government would need to regulate this particular use of facial recognition. Per Meta: The reality is that this tech doesn’t appear to have been unethical or harmful. It was an opt-in technology. Chances are, even the upcoming European regulations on facial recognition tech and AI would have allowed for its continued use. Meta’s actually pulling a facial recognition system out of production here that users really liked. It alerted people when they’d been tagged in a photo, which was pretty useful. And it also provided audio cues as to who was in a photo for the visually impaired. So, to sum up, the company’s cancelling a useful AI system that appears to be one of the few ethical uses of facial recognition and framing it as self regulation. Meanwhile, it’s actually going to make it easier for people to share unwanted images of you on Facebook (since you will no longer be notified) and it’ll make things harder on the visually impaired. Yep. I’d recognize the smell of this dumpster fire anywhere, by any name.