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Facebook stops automatic facial recognition to tag photos

Facebook has run into legal trouble over its use of "tag suggestions", which picked out people in photos upon upload.

LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 03: The Facebook app logo is displayed on an iPad next to a picture of the Facebook logo on an iPhone on August 3, 2016 in London, England. (Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images)
Image: Facial recognition will no longer automatically tag people on Facebook
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Facebook has announced it will no longer use facial recognition technology to automatically tag people in photos unless the user has opted in.

The social media giant has previously run into legal trouble regarding its use of the "tag suggestions" feature, which is able to pick out individual people in photos as soon as they are uploaded.

Its bid to have a class action lawsuit over the issue thrown out , with a judge ruling that the data stored by Facebook was an invasion of "private affairs and concrete interests".

Users will have to opt in to the use of facial recognition
Image: Users will now have to opt in to the use of facial recognition

In a blog post, the company said it is now making facial recognition in photos an opt-in feature by default - meaning users will have to enable a specific setting to make clear they are happy for the tech to be used.

The option - named "face recognition" rather than "tag suggestions" in the settings menu - will be turned off. Users will receive a notification when it is rolled out to ask whether they want to enable it.

If it is turned on, Facebook will notify users each time someone uploads a photo of them, even if they are not tagged.

The changes should have already started being made available to Facebook users worldwide, the company said.

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It added that it would continue to consult "privacy experts, academics, regulators and people on Facebook" about how it uses the tech and the options users have to control it.

"We've made the steps to update your settings clearer and you can opt to leave your setting off right in the notice, as opposed to having to go to a separate screen," the company said.

"If you do nothing, face recognition will remain off for you.

"There's also an opportunity to review information about our technology and the features it powers so that you can make the choice that's right for you.

"Finally, Facebook's face recognition technology still does not recognise you to strangers. We don't share your face recognition information with third parties. We also don't sell our technology."

A Cambridge Analytica sign is pictured at the entrance of the building which houses the offices of Cambridge Analytica, in central London on March 21, 2018. Facebook expressed outrage over the misuse of its data as Cambridge Analytica, the British firm at the centre of a major scandal rocking the social media giant, suspended its chief executive. / AFP PHOTO / Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS (Photo credit should read DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP/Getty Images)
Image: Facebook has made changes following the Cambridge Analytica scandal

The move is the latest in an increasingly long line of changes to Facebook policy in a bid to clean up its image regarding user privacy, which has loomed large over the firm since the Cambridge Analytica scandal.

There was global outrage last year when it emerged the political consultancy firm had harvested the personal data of millions of Facebook profiles without consent - and used it for political advertising.

Facebook said 87 million users were affected and it was hit with a £500,000 fine in the UK for "serious breaches of data protection law" by failing to safeguard the personal information of its users.

Last month, Facebook launched a tool to let users stop apps and businesses sharing their data to the platform.

The company also told Sky News it had stopped using human contractors to listen and transcribe recordings of users without their knowledge, which were being taken from conversations in its Messenger app.