Israeli tech firm undercuts facial recognition to
bolster privacy
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[February 14, 2018]
By Rinat Harash and Ari Rabinovitch
TEL AVIV (Reuters) - Big brother is
watching. But in the future he may no longer be so all-knowing.
Riding the wave of a global push to comply with new privacy standards, a
small Israeli company believes it can help you, and your face, stay
anonymous in a hyper-connected world.
The startup, called D-ID, says it has developed a "firewall" to block
facial recognition, the ubiquitous technology that can now unlock
smartphones, tag friends on Facebook, or help police pick out an
individual hiding in a crowd.
The problem is that with facial recognition on the rise, hackers have a
new target: huge reservoirs of profile pictures linked to personal
information.
Companies around the world are spending big money to protect such
databases before a stricter European law takes effect in May. Called the
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), it gives people more control
over their online information and applies to all groups that do business
in Europe.
The idea for D-ID took shape a decade ago, when two of its founders took
a trip to South America after serving in Israel's special forces.
Friends would post pictures online, but because of their previous jobs,
they were forbidden from sharing pictures publicly in case they were
recognized.
They began looking for a way for people to share pictures while
protecting their identities and a year ago formed the company.
The challenge was to foil facial recognition algorithms, which analyze a
person's face and match it to a stored digital image in the same way
that crime scene fingerprints are run against a database.
"More and more organizations are using our faces as identifiers, if it's
to access our phones, to withdraw money or at border controls. That's
why our photos must be protected, because unlike passwords, you cannot
change your face," said Gil Perry, D-ID's CEO.
Designers have created eyeglasses that reflect light to jam cameras and
websites offer fashion and make-up tips for camouflaging your face, but
in general little can be done to avoid being identified.
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Gil Perry, CEO of startup company D-ID, stands on stage during a
presentation to the CyberTech 2018 conference in Tel Aviv, Israel
January 31, 2018. REUTERS/Nir Elias
DIGITAL ALCHEMY
D-ID's solution is a system of digital alchemy that subtly alters stored
pictures, enough to escape detection by facial recognition algorithms. Side by
side the changes are noticeable, but on its own the altered picture appears
normal.
D-ID is planning a pilot with Cloudinary, a firm that manages 15 billion
cloud-based images and videos for web and mobile developers.
It has also signed preliminary agreements with a number of leading government
organizations - Perry would not disclose which ones, nor how much the product
will sell for.
The product launch is planned for the end of May, around the time the new
European law takes effect.
Yuval Elovici, who heads the cyber security research center at Israel's Ben
Gurion University, said there is now an "arms race" between groups developing
facial recognition algorithms and those looking to confound them. He said D-ID's
technology was an achievement and important for privacy, but that it did have
its limitations.
"You cannot oblige everybody to use this technology and to publish pictures only
after a transformation," he said.
Tech startups are often located in high-rises of Tel Aviv's financial district.
D-ID's second-floor office is secluded in an inconspicuous residential block,
opposite a playground. It has raised $4 million, including from Israel's Pitango
Venture Capital and Silicon Valley's Y Combinator, to support a team of 14
computer engineers.
There are drawbacks. For law enforcement agencies using the system it will be
harder to locate a suspect. So D-ID is working on a solution that will allow
such agencies to authenticate identities without storing biometric information,
Perry said. How? He declined to elaborate.
(Editing by Adrian Croft)
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