face recognitionBusinessFace Recognition Is Being Banned—but It’s Still EverywhereBy Tom SimoniteBusinessEven as China Cracks Down on Tech, AI Companies Plan IPOsBy Will KnightBusinessFacebook Drops Facial Recognition to Tag People in PhotosBy Khari JohnsonSecurityThis AI Predicts How Old Children Are. Can It Keep Them Safe?By Matt BurgessBusinessClearview AI Has New Tools to Identify You in PhotosBy Will KnightIdeasApple’s Privacy Mythology Doesn’t Match RealityBy Albert Fox Cahn and Evan SelingerBusinessThe NYPD Had a Secret Fund for Surveillance ToolsBy Sidney FussellBusinessAs the Use of AI Spreads, Congress Looks to Rein It InBy Tom SimoniteBusinessBaltimore May Soon Ban Face Recognition for Everyone but CopsBy Sidney FussellIdeasFacial Verification Won't Fight FraudBy Albert Fox Cahn and Evan SelingerBusinessThe All-Seeing Eyes of New York’s 15,000 Surveillance CamerasBy Sidney FussellBusinessA Border Town Confronts the Reality of Police SurveillanceBy Sidney FussellBusinessEurope's Proposed Limits on AI Would Have Global ConsequencesBy Will KnightBusinessHow Face Recognition Can Destroy AnonymityBy Tom SimoniteBusinessResearchers Blur Faces That Launched a Thousand AlgorithmsBy Will KnightIdeasNew York City’s Surveillance Battle Offers National LessonsBy Albert Fox Cahn and Justin ShermanBusinessThe Next Target for a Facial Recognition Ban? New YorkBy Sidney FussellSecurityA Site Published Every Face From Parler's Capitol Riot VideosBy Andy GreenbergBusinessJob Screening Service Halts Facial Analysis of ApplicantsBy Will KnightBusinessA Startup Will Nix Algorithms Built on Ill-Gotten Facial DataBy Tom SimoniteIdeasThe Capitol Attack Doesn’t Justify Expanding SurveillanceBy Albert Fox CahnBusinessNew York City Proposes Regulating Algorithms Used in HiringBy Tom SimoniteBusinessSome UK Stores Are Using Facial Recognition to Track Shoppers By Matt BurgessBusinessCongress Is Eyeing Face Recognition, and Companies Want a SayBy Tom SimoniteMore Stories