The increasing spread of emotional AI, brings with it new concerns about privacy, personal data rights and, well, freedom of expression (although, in a sense, perhaps, not thought about much in the past). The data that the emotion recognition captures could be considered to be biometric data, just like a scan of your fingerprint. However, there is little legislation globally that specifically addresses the capture, usage rights and privacy considerations of biometric data. Until GDPR.
Continue reading this story on Linkedin