'A shop's AI recognition software mistook me for a fraudster'

A man with a bald head and tidy, mid-length black beard, greying either side of his chin. He is smiling slightly but looks concerned, with his eyebrows drawn up together. He is stood on the side of a road in an urban environment which is blurred in the background. Tall signs suggest he is near a retail park.
Image caption,

Craig Hadley was mistaken for a fraudster who also had a bald head and beard

  • Published

A man who was wrongly accused of fraud after AI facial recognition software flagged his image has said he will "never step foot" in a Sports Direct store again.

A staff member at the Parkgate Shopping Centre in Rotherham had identified Craig Hadley to the programme a few weeks earlier after mistaking him for another "bald-headed, bearded" customer who had defrauded the retailer.

Sports Direct apologised for the incident, saying it was "genuine mistake", and added that a formal investigation and further staff training would be undertaken.

Mr Hadley said: "At first, I thought it was a joke, but then it became clear it was quite serious, and they escorted me out of the shop."

He said he had been "really anxious" in the weeks it took to resolve the issue.

"There was a fear of my photo being in other shops where they might throw me out," he added.

"It caused embarrassment, it could cause reputational damage."

A sports direct store in a retail park. It is a large, cuboid, grey building. The logo for the shop is blue and red. The image is taken from a distance away in the car park, showing lots of parked vehicles near the storefront.
Image caption,

Mr Hadley said he would "never step foot" in Sports Direct again

The software company, Facewatch, deleted Mr Hadley's image from its database after he had proven his identity to the company and the CCTV had been checked manually.

Mr Hadley agreed the fraudster, who had been at the till at the same time he had been paying, "looked very similar" to him.

"I get it was a human error and people make mistakes," he said.

"But, when those mistakes can result in people who have done nothing wrong being put on a national database, there needs to be some more checks and balances."

Madeleine Stone, from the civil liberties campaign group Big Brother Watch, said using software like Facewatch to deal with shoplifting was a "recipe for disaster".

"You could be blacklisted from your local shops, placed on a secret watchlist, and that information is shared in all the shops in your area," she said.

"There is not necessarily any evidence of wrongdoing and there is no due process.

"Many people have been really impacted by this."

A Facewatch representative told Mr Hadley that avoiding wrongly including individuals on its database was "of the highest importance" to the company.

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