U.S. banks deploy AI to monitor customers, workers amid tech backlash
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[April 19, 2021] By
Paresh Dave and Jeffrey Dastin
(Reuters) - Several U.S. banks have started
deploying camera software that can analyze customer preferences, monitor
workers and spot people sleeping near ATMs, even as they remain wary
about possible backlash over increased surveillance, more than a dozen
banking and technology sources told Reuters.
Previously unreported trials at City National Bank of Florida and
JPMorgan Chase & Co as well as earlier rollouts at banks such as Wells
Fargo & Co offer a rare view into the potential U.S. financial
institutions see in facial recognition and related artificial
intelligence systems.
Widespread deployment of such visual AI tools in the heavily regulated
banking sector would be a significant step toward their becoming
mainstream in corporate America.
Bobby Dominguez, chief information security officer at City National,
said smartphones that unlock via a face scan have paved the way.
"We're already leveraging facial recognition on mobile," he said. "Why
not leverage it in the real world?"
City National will begin facial recognition trials early next year to
identify customers at teller machines and employees at branches, aiming
to replace clunky and less secure authentication measures at its 31
sites, Dominguez said. Eventually, the software could spot people on
government watch lists, he said.
JPMorgan said it is "conducting a small test of video analytic
technology with a handful of branches in Ohio." Wells Fargo said it
works to prevent fraud but declined to discuss how.
Civil liberties issues loom large. Critics point to arrests of innocent
individuals following faulty facial matches, disproportionate use of the
systems to monitor lower-income and non-white communities, and the loss
of privacy inherent in ubiquitous surveillance.
Portland, Oregon, as of Jan. 1 banned businesses from using facial
recognition "in places of public accommodation," and drugstore chain
Rite Aid Corp shut a nationwide face recognition program last year.
Dominguez and other bank executives said their deployments are sensitive
to the issues.
"We're never going to compromise our clients' privacy," Dominguez said.
"We're getting off to an early start on technology already used in other
parts of the world and that is rapidly coming to the American banking
network."
Still, the big question among banks, said Fredrik Nilsson, vice
president of the Americas at Axis Communications, a top maker of
surveillance cameras, is "what will be the potential backlash from the
public if we roll this out?"
Walter Connors, chief information officer at Brannen Bank, said the
Florida company had discussed but not adopted the technology for its 12
locations. "Anybody walking into a branch expects to be recorded,"
Connors said. "But when you're talking about face recognition, that's a
larger conversation."
BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE
JPMorgan began assessing the potential of computer vision in 2019 by
using internally developed software to analyze archived footage from
Chase branches in New York and Ohio, where one of its two Innovation
Labs is located, said two people including former employee Neil Bhandar,
who oversaw some of the effort at the time.
Chase aims to gather data to better schedule staff and design branches,
three people said and the bank confirmed. Bhandar said some staff even
went to one of Amazon.com Inc's cashier-less convenience stores to learn
about its computer vision system.
Preliminary analysis by Bhandar of branch footage revealed more men
would visit before or after lunch, while women tended to arrive
mid-afternoon. Bhandar said he also wanted to analyze whether women
avoided compact spaces in ATM lobbies because they might bump into
someone, but the pandemic halted the plan.
Testing facial recognition to identify clients as they walk into a Chase
bank, if they consented to it, has been another possibility considered
to enhance their experience, a current employee involved in innovation
projects said.
Chase would not be the first to evaluate those uses. A bank in the
Northeast recently used computer vision to identify busy areas in
branches with newer layouts, an executive there said, speaking on the
condition the company not be named.
A Midwestern credit union last year tested facial recognition for client
identification at four locations before pausing over cost concerns, a
source said.
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Cameras are seen on the
exterior of a Chase Bank branch in New York City U.S., April 7,
2021. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
While Chase developed custom computer vision in-house using components from
Google, IBM Watson and Amazon Web Services, it also considered fully built
systems from software startups AnyVision and Vintra, people including Bhandar
said. AnyVision declined to comment, and Vintra did not respond to requests for
comment.
Chase said it ultimately chose a different vendor, which it declined to name,
out of 11 options considered and began testing that company's technology at a
handful of Ohio locations last October. The effort aims to identify transaction
times, how many people leave because of long queues and which activities are
occupying workers.
The bank added that facial, race and gender recognition are not part of this
test.
Using technology to guess customers' demographics can be problematic, some
ethics experts say, because it reinforces stereotypes. Some computer vision
programs also are less accurate on people of color, and critics have warned that
could lead to unjust outcomes.
Chase has weighed ethical questions. For instance, some internally called for
reconsidering planned testing in Harlem, a historically Black neighborhood in
New York, because it could be viewed as racially insensitive, two of the people
said. The discussions emerged about the same time as a December 2019 New York
Times article about racism at Chase branches in Arizona.
Analyzing race was not part of the eventually tabled plans, and the Harlem
branch had been selected because it housed the other Chase Innovation Lab for
evaluating new technology, the people said and the bank confirmed.
TARGETING THE HOMELESS
Security uses for computer vision long have stirred banks' interest. Wells Fargo
used primitive software from the company 3VR over a decade ago to review footage
of crimes and see if any faces matched those of known offenders, said John
Honovich, who worked at 3VR and founded video surveillance research organization
IPVM.
Identiv, which acquired 3VR in 2018, said banking sales were a major focus, but
it declined to comment on Wells Fargo.
A security executive at a mid-sized Southern bank, speaking on the condition of
anonymity to discuss secret measures, said over the last 18 months it has rolled
out video analytics software at nearly every branch to generate alerts when
doors to safes, computer server rooms and other sensitive areas are left open.
Outside, the bank monitors for loitering, such as the recurring issue of people
setting up tents under the overhang for drive-through ATMs. Security staff at a
control center can play an audio recording politely asking those people to
leave, the executive said.
The issue of people sleeping in enclosed ATM lobbies has long been an industry
concern, said Brian Karas, vice president of sales at Airship Industries, which
develops video management and analytics software.
Systems that detected loitering so staff could activate a siren or strobe light
helped increase ATM usage and reduce vandalism for several banks, he said.
Though companies did not want to displace people seeking shelter, they felt this
was necessary to make ATMs safe and accessible, Karas said.
City National's Dominguez said the bank's branches use computer vision to detect
suspicious activity outside.
Sales records from 2010 and 2011 reviewed by Reuters show that Bank of America
Corp purchased "iCVR" cameras, which were marketed at the time as helping
organizations reduce loitering in ATM lobbies. Bank of America said it no longer
uses iCVR technology.
The Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank's interest in computer vision has not
abated. Its officials met with AnyVision on multiple occasions in 2019,
including at a September conference during which the startup demonstrated how it
could identify the face of a Bank of America executive, according to records of
the presentation seen by Reuters and a person in attendance.
The bank said, "We are always reviewing potential new technology solutions that
are on the market."
(Reporting by Paresh Dave and Jeffrey Dastin in San Francisco; Additional
reporting by Anna Irrera and Imani Moise; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Lisa
Shumaker)
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