Thursday, February 9, 2017

Group 2 Case Studies

Scenario 1:
  1. Yes, we would give the ticket holders notice that they are being watched with facial recognition software by printing something on the back of a ticket and putting up signs around the stadium.
  2. Holding and using the ticket gives implied consent due to the warning on the back and entering the stadium gives implied consent due to the warning signs.
  3. For our policy, we will only store the information about the crowd for a max of 24 hours after the game. We will store the data in a secure manner and will not sell the information. And only a select group of security personnel will have access to the data.

Scenario 2:
    We only created a list of questions about the kiosk since we decided that questions, concerns, and issues are all very similar (you are concerned about an issue so you ask a question about it).

Questions:
Does it save pictures, how long?
What are the websites and programs the technology uses/queries?
Does it store information about what you buy?
Who has access to this information (just the drink company, the drink company and the store the kiosk is located in, or the drink company and every store that has a kiosk)?
How does the coupon system work?
Does the kiosk create a profile about users, and can one access the profile it creates about them?
Does the purchase history exclude prescriptions/sensitive items?
Can you opt out of the program and still be a frequent shopper?
How far is the range of the scanner?
Can you see what photos the program uses?
What kind of warnings or forms of consent are given to users?
Are customers allowed to send feedback on the coupon and kiosk?

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