Categories
Research Post

Research Post 3

It is very interesting to me how not only race affects facial recognition, but also cultural norms and actions. This article discusses the different testings and research that had to be done for facial recognition, and some situations surprised me such as this excerpt: “If we maintain an expression for too long because our environment requires it, we can start to have emotional trauma. This is a documented problem in the service industry in Japan and Korea where employees are expected to constantly maintain smiles, creating a disorder called smile mask syndrome.” I grew up in Korea and this sentence made me think about how different facial expressions are between Korea and America. It is interesting how there are so many different changes, whether gradual, or sudden we all have and how it affects our technology. 

Furthermore, this article showed how racism ideals in facial recognition technology has affected communities in different aspects. The last paragraph is especially powerful: “…The second is that the liberation of Black folks and all oppressed peoples will never be achieved by inclusion in systems controlled by a capitalist elite which benefits from the perpetuation of racism and related oppressions. It can only be achieved by the destruction of those systems, and the construction of new technologies designed, developed, and deployed by our own communities for our own benefit. The struggle for liberation is not a struggle for diversity and inclusion — it is a struggle for decolonization, reparations, and self-determination.” It is very important to have representation in designs of new technologies because of how it can affect different people groups in different ways; especially if the technology was designed by one people group, and basically for one people group only. We want the world to be the most equality it can be, and sometimes it means tearing down a wall to build a new one, not just adding on to it. I never realized how racist facial recognition was and still is today, but I understand know how very important it is that this injustice be reformed.