Microsoft retires facial recognition tool

Update: 2022-06-23 00:14 IST

AI is becoming more and more a part of our lives, and yet, our laws are lagging behind. They have not caught up with AI's unique risks or society's needs

New Delhi: Amid the debate over the controversial facial recognition technology, Microsoft has announced to restrict public access to several of its AI-powered facial analysis tools, including retiring facial analysis tools that purport to infer emotional states and identity gender, age, smile, facial hair, hair and makeup.

The tech giant said that it will not provide open-ended API (application programming interface) access to technology that can scan people's faces and purport to infer their emotional states based on their facial expressions or movements.

The decision has been taken as part of Microsoft's 'Responsible AI Standard', a framework to guide how it builds AI systems.

"AI is becoming more and more a part of our lives, and yet, our laws are lagging behind. They have not caught up with AI's unique risks or society's needs," said Natasha Crampton, Chief Responsible AI Officer at Microsoft.

"While we see signs that government action on AI is expanding, we also recognise our responsibility to act. We believe that we need to work towards ensuring AI systems are responsible by design," she said in a statement.

Microsoft also introduced similar restrictions to its Custom Neural Voice feature, which lets users create AI voices based on recordings of real people.

Building upon what Microsoft learned from Custom Neural Voice, it will apply similar controls to its facial recognition services.

"After a transition period for existing customers, we are limiting access to these services to managed customers and partners, narrowing the use cases to pre-defined acceptable ones, and leveraging technical controls engineered into the services," the company announced.

Microsoft said it will stop offering these features to new customers from June 21, while existing customers will have their access revoked on June 30, 2023.

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