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Biometric Mirror: Exploring Ethical Opinions towards Facial Analysis and Automated Decision-Making

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Published:18 June 2019Publication History

ABSTRACT

Facial analysis applications are increasingly being applied to inform decision-making processes. However, as global reports of unfairness emerge, governments, academia and industry have recognized the ethical limitations and societal implications of this technology. Alongside initiatives that aim to formulate ethical frameworks, we believe that the public should be invited to participate in the debate. In this paper, we discuss Biometric Mirror, a case study that explored opinions about the ethics of an emerging technology. The interactive application distinguished demographic and psychometric information from people's facial photos and presented speculative scenarios with potential consequences based on their results. We analyzed the interactions with Biometric Mirror and media reports covering the study. Our findings demonstrate the nature of public opinion about the technology's possibilities, reliability, and privacy implications. Our study indicates an opportunity for case study-based digital ethics research, and we provide practical guidelines for designing future studies.

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        DIS '19: Proceedings of the 2019 on Designing Interactive Systems Conference
        June 2019
        1628 pages
        ISBN:9781450358507
        DOI:10.1145/3322276

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