The ESRB wants to start using facial scanning technology to check peoples ages

The ESRB wants to start using facial scanning technology to check people's ages​

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Andy Chalk
Mon, 24 July 2023 at 4:52 pm GMT-5·3-min read

Remember a couple years ago, when Chinese gaming giant Tencent began using facial recognition to keep the kids from playing too many videogames? It turns out that the Entertainment Software Rating Board, North America's videogame rating agency, is looking to do something quite similar.

The ESRB, along with digital identity company Yoti and Epic Games-owned "youth digital media" company SuperAwesome, have filed a proposal with the FTC seeking approval for a new "verifiable parental consent mechanism" called Privacy-Protective Facial Age Estimation. Simply put, the parent takes a selfie, assisted by an "auto face capture module," which is then analyzed by the system to ensure it's the face of an adult, who can then grant whatever permissions are required. The entire process of verification takes less than a second "on average," and images are permanently deleted after the verification is complete.

"The upload of still images is not accepted, and photos that do not meet the required level of quality to create an age estimate are rejected," the filing states. "These factors minimize the risk of circumvention and of children taking images of unaware adults."

Of course, kids outsmarting the system isn't the only risk at play here. Accuracy strikes me as the big one, given that facial recognition technology is so notoriously racist: A study conducted in the US, for instance, found that Asian and African American people were up to 100 times more likely to be incorrectly identified by facial recognition systems than white people. And maybe I'm underestimating the magic at work here but determining whether someone is 16 or 18 based on a single selfie also strikes me as a real roll of the dice. The ESRB dismissed concerns about the "fairness" of the system, however, saying that "the difference in rejection rates between gender and skin tone is very small."

"The data suggests that for those between 25 and 35, 15 out of 1,000 females vs 7 out of 1,000 males might be incorrectly classified as under-25 (and would have the option of verifying using another method)," the filing states. "The range of difference by skin tone is between 8 out of 1,000 vs 28 out of 1,000. While bias exists, as is inherent in any automated system, this is not material, especially as compared to the benefits and the increase in access to certain groups of parents."

It's important to note that none of this is proposed as a replacement for current systems: Instead, the ESRB presented its facial age verification plan as "an additional, optional verification method" that will be of particular use to people who don't have photo ID. In a statement send to PC Gamer, Yoti also noted that the system works without actually recognizing or identifying individuals: Instead, the technology simply estimates the age of the image it sees.

That's all good, but in my eyes it doesn't change the fact that, yeah, this really is a gross invasion of privacy—I sure as hell don't want to be sharing my mug with the Great Digital Overmind just so my hypothetical kid can play some GTA Online. Quite honestly, I also don't think relying on potentially-dodgy technology to enforce our social mores is such a great idea to begin with. And come on, does anyone seriously think that a sharp 16-year-old won't have this system beat in about 15 minutes anyway?

The ESRB actually made its request to the FTC back on June 2, but it's only come to light now (via GamesIndustry) because the FTC is now seeking public comment on the plan. If you'd like to share your thoughts, you've got until August 21 to do so at federalregister.gov.
 
This feels unenforceable, but it sounds retarded enough that I can see the ESRB actually trying to push this through. Good thing modern video games are mostly garbage, so if there's ever been a good jumping off point for a hobby, this might be it.
It's not just unenforceable, it's practically anti-ethical to the whole point of the ESRB. Back in the early 90's; Mortal Kombat and meme game Night Trap got enough attention of the federal government. Instead of accepting government oversight, the videogame companies (the few that there were) said they could monitor themselves like the MPAA (movies) do, and the ESRB and its associated rating system was born.

And the thing is, the ESRB doesn't have an enforcement arm, it's a fucking gentleman's agreement between the game companies and retailers. If a retailer sells little Johnny Grand Theft Auto and little Johnny's mom comes in, the most that will happen is the clerk might get fired for bring a bad name to the store. But there's no criminal let alone civil law saying "HOW DARE YOU CORRUPT THE YOUTH WITH YOUR TRASH! 100 LASHES!" Stores enforce the rating system to keep stupid parents off their backs.

The only way to enforce this, would be to require every game that receives a commercial release (because every commercial release gets a rating) be connected to a device that can scan your face and/or the faces of everyone in a room, as well as detect who's holding a controller (if they want to be that fancy). The amount of work to make something like this, let alone getting people to go along with it is damn near an impossible effort; because you're gonna end up strong-arming every fucking PC/Console system and game developer, or risk a game not getting a commercial release. The ESRB exists (at least it did once upon a time) at the behest of game developers and associated bodies. This is the ESRB is pointing a loaded gun at their own fucking head and daring everyone to tell them to pull the trigger.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Terrifik
Serious question, when was the last time any of us paid any attention to an ESRB rating in a game?
I have nieces and nephews, so often. Sadly, they have irresponsible parents who are fine with them playing GTA. These kids aren't even in middle school yet.
 
And this is the point where people should be making their own games, making use of older tech because the newer ones are complete pieces of shit owned by globohomo's cathedral. Can't regulate your face when you're busy replaying Sega masterpieces on an emulator.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Leaf Wage Slave Jr
Inb4 the software identifies all black people as adult gorillas (again) and they quietly shelve the idea
 
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