Ben Metcalfe

Riya – when the “open concept” goes too far (REPOST)

For those of you who don’t know, Riya is a new “stealthy start-up” which is pitching itself as a photo search engine. Ryia’s USP is that it incorporates facial recognition technology.

As I understand it the idea goes like this:

In addition to spidering websites for photos, I’m sure it will also search photo repositories such as Flickr.

A number of people seem to be really digging Riya – including Michael Arrington of TechCrunch who is holding the Riya’s launch party in is home!

But I have some serious privacy concerns about this product.

If someone puts a photograph of me on the Internet then I’ve lost an element of privacy – and there’s not much I can do about that. However if my name cannot be attributed to that photo, perhaps because they havn’t tagged my name with it, then I’m pretty ‘safe’. There’s little to connect me to that photo.

Riya removes that element of anonymity within photos – and the most concerning examples of this are where you might be in the background, where you are not the primary focus of the photo.

Specifically, my concern goes like this:

Many might argue that this is all “fair game”, but my point would be that this kind of technology was originally developed for use in regulated environments – such as local authority CCTV scanning.

Photos are funny things, where the person who took the photo, not the person(s) who is/are in the photo, holds all the rights. This steps up the concerns to a whole new level – where abuse of the service can take place, and people’s privacy and anonymity are seriously eroded.

There are also some potential issues here. Matt Locke made the point that it would be difficult for the software to distinguish him from his identical twin brother – at best limiting the use of the software in this instance, and at worst falsely attributing him to incriminating photos (who knows what kind of debauchery Matt’s brother gets up to???!?).

The other issue is around the use of an opt-out feature (which I would like there to be). The issue is simply that I could imagine many people opting out and thereby limiting the value of the proposition.

And don’t get me started on the potential consequences of the rumoured pre-launch buy-out by Google (the company which seems to upping it’s potential to obliterate it’s original mantra of “do no harm”).

Who knows what will happen to Riya. I’ve signed up for the beta (although am yet to receive an invitation). I understand it is due to launch into V1.0 very soon, so that will probably be the first opportunity to see whether my concerns are valid. I fear they might be…