Photorealistic illustration of Disneyland entrance showing families being scanned by facial recognition cameras with lawsuit overlay, for a news article on Disney biometric privacy case.
Photorealistic illustration of Disneyland entrance showing families being scanned by facial recognition cameras with lawsuit overlay, for a news article on Disney biometric privacy case.
Image générée par IA

Disney visé par une plainte de 5 millions de dollars concernant la reconnaissance faciale dans ses parcs

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The Walt Disney Company fait face à une proposition de recours collectif concernant le récent déploiement de sa technologie de reconnaissance faciale à Disneyland et dans d'autres parcs à thème californiens. La plainte de 5 millions de dollars affirme que le système biométrique a été déployé sans consentement adéquat et soulève des préoccupations en matière de protection des données, notamment pour les mineurs.

Disney a commencé à utiliser la reconnaissance faciale aux portes des parcs fin avril afin d'accélérer l'entrée et la réentrée tout en empêchant l'utilisation non autorisée des pass. Les visiteurs peuvent refuser, bien que les files d'attente sans scan soient plus longues. L'entreprise convertit les photos en valeurs numériques à des fins de comparaison et supprime les données dans un délai de 30 jours, sauf en cas de fraude ou de problèmes juridiques. Le consentement d'un parent ou d'un tuteur est requis pour le scan des enfants de moins de 18 ans.

Ce que les gens disent

Les premières réactions sur X font état de préoccupations concernant la confidentialité des données biométriques collectées à Disneyland, de scepticisme quant au consentement via la signalétique, ainsi que de partages neutres de l'information concernant le recours collectif de 5 millions de dollars.

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