Digital cameras these days come with lots of helpful features: red-eye reduction, auto-focus, smile detection, and face detection are only a few of the many. While most of us find these features to be beneficial, others surprisingly find them as racist! How could a digital camera be racist, you may ask..?
Joz Wang and her brother bought their mom a new Nikon Coolpix S630 digital camera for Mother’s Day. While testing it out on each other a message kept flashing on the screen, “Did someone blink ?” No, no one had blinked. At first they thought the camera might be malfunctioning, but they soon found out it was just using the face detection feature. Face detection lets you know if people are blinking while you’re trying to take a picture so you won’t end up with any of those embarrassing ”eyes closed” pictures we all immediately delete.
Nikon isn’t the only brand that has displayed an occasional bias toward Caucasians. Face detection is supposed to make photography more convenient. It has also found its way into computer webcams, where it can track a person’s face during a video conference or enable face-recognition software to prevent unauthorized access.
As one can see, this feature can be quite the life saver…unless you’re Asian. Which is ironic because you’d think that Nikon, being an Japanese company itself, would have thought about this issue before releasing the product…