this post was submitted on 14 Sep 2025
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So I had researched it a while ago and don't recall having found anything effective and non-suspicious to protect from public camera mass survaillence in cities and the like. Is there anything that is a good option for that yet, and if so, could you point me toward it?

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[–] Zerush@lemmy.ml -5 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I asked Andi

Recent advances in facial recognition technology have sparked development of various counter-surveillance clothing and accessories. These anti-surveillance methods fall into several key categories:

Physical Alterations and Clothing

  • Patterned clothing with complex designs that confuse facial recognition algorithms[^4]
  • Reflective materials that bounce back infrared light used by security cameras[^4]
  • Special scarves and hoodies designed to break up facial features[^4]
  • The "Camera Shy Hoodie" with embedded IR LEDs that overexpose security camera footage[^14]
  • Cap_Able brand clothing with patterns designed to deceive recognition systems[^16]

Technical Solutions

  • Infrared LED glasses that blind facial recognition cameras while remaining invisible to human eyes[^4]
  • Anti-surveillance devices that emit signals to interfere with camera sensors[^4]
  • Reflectacles privacy eyewear that blocks IR cameras[^8]

Professional Applications

  • Small reflective dot stickers used for motion tracking and high-speed camera detection[^1]
  • Camera obscura techniques used by photographers and artists[^11]

Law Enforcement Concerns

  • Police forces are expanding use of facial recognition vans and technology[^7][^13]
  • Civil liberties groups argue the technology shows racial bias and privacy concerns[^9]
  • West Yorkshire's Crime Commissioner states that facial recognition data "will not be stored"[^7]

Sources:

[^1]: Amazon - Golf Club & Golf Ball Reflective Dot Stickers [^4]: Luxand - How to Fool and Avoid Facial Recognition in Public Places [^7]: BBC - 'Facial recognition can make mistakes, it's not a decision-maker' [^8]: Reflectacles - Ghost Privacy Eyewear & Sunglasses [^9]: Yahoo/Telegraph - Facial recognition cameras at Notting Hill Carnival 'are racially biased' [^11]: Wikipedia - Camera obscura [^13]: Facebook - Digital face recognition camera van in Albany Rd [^14]: Mac Pierce - The Camera Shy Hoodie [^16]: Maker Faire Rome - Fabric to deceive facial recognition systems

[–] agile_squirrel@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

As an unrelated question, why do you use Andi instead of other privacy centric AI such as Duck.ai, Lumo, Brave AI, etc? I'm not familiar with Andi so I'm curious.

[–] Zerush@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago

Because Andi is until now the most privacy centric and reliable one of all I've tested since almost 3 years, it was the first ever search AI on the market, 5 Years ago, former called Lazyweb.ai, years before. Own LLM not biased by big companies. Developed by a small startup of 2 devs.

Statement:

....We're a small team of two founders (Angela and Jed) and some friends. We're on a mission to unbreak the Internet and save the world from spam, misinformation and ad tech.

Search is broken because of misinformation, SEO spam and ads, and surveillance capitalism. It hasn't changed in 20 years. Things are getting worse. The rise of GPT-based chatbots that confidently generate accurate-sounding "BS" with made-up sources is driving misinformation through the roof.

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