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A university in Canada is expected to remove a series of vending machines from campus after a student discovered an indication they used facial-recognition technology. The smart vending machines at the University of Waterloo first gained attention this month when the Reddit user SquidKid47 shared a photo.
The post drew speculation from some users and caught the attention of a University of Waterloo student whom the tech-news website Ars Technica identified as River Stanley, a writer for the local student publication MathNews. Stanley investigated the smart vending machines, discovering that they're provided by Adaria Vending Services and manufactured by Invenda Group. In response to the student publication's report, the director of technology services for Adaria Vending Services told MathNews that "an individual person cannot be identified using the technology in the machines.
The regulation is part of the EU's privacy legislation that determines how corporations can collect citizens' data. Invenda Group told MathNews that the technology did not store information on "permanent memory mediums" and that the machines were GDPR compliant.
MathNews reported that Invenda Group's FAQ list said that "only the final data, namely presence of a person, estimated age and estimated gender, is collected without any association with an individual. The software relies on people detection and facial analysis, not face recognition," the statement said. In the meantime, we've asked that the software be disabled," Rebecca Elming, a representative for the University of Waterloo, told the outlet. Representatives for the University of Waterloo, Adaria Vending Services, and Mars did not respond to Business Insider's requests for comment, sent over the weekend ahead of publication.
Facial-recognition technology on college campuses has caused tension for students and staff members, with examples popping up globally. In May , a school in China began monitoring students in classrooms with facial-recognition technology that scanned every 30 seconds. Two years later, a woman on TikTok claimed she failed a test after a test-proctoring artificial-intelligence system accused her of cheating.