Frasers Group facial recognition
Occurred: April 2023
Can you improve this page?
Share your insights with us
A group of UK politicians, peers and civil rights groups have condemned Frasers Group for its use of live facial recognition across its businesses, including Sports Direct, Frasers, and Jack Wills. The Facewatch system is intended to identify shoplifters from a database of actual and suspected criminals, and ensure safety, alerting staff when a suspect enters one of Fraser Group's stores.
But rights groups Big Brother Watch, Liberty and Privacy International, together with over 50 parliamentarians and peers, wrote (pdf) to Frasers Group CEO Michael Murray that the technology is inherently 'invasive and discriminatory' and 'treats everyone who passes the camera like a potential criminal.'
Frasers Group responded by saying its system was more accurate than the 87 percent associated with the Met Police highlighted by the campaigners, and that the UK Information Commissioner's Office had said Facewatch's use was lawful.
System
Research, advocacy
Big Brother Watch (2023). Parliamentarians and rights groups call on Frasers Group to drop facial recognition cameras
Legal, regulatory
Information Commissioner's Office (2023). Balancing people’s privacy rights with the need to prevent crime
News, commentary, analysis
Page info
Type: Incident
Published: May 2023