Facial Recognition at Concerts and Events
Major venues now use facial recognition to match attendees against law enforcement watchlists. This page covers everything you need to know about facial recognition at concerts and events — and what you can do about it today.
Why This Context Matters
Facial recognition isn't deployed uniformly. Different environments use different systems with different retention policies, different legal authorities, and different downstream uses for the data they collect. Understanding the specific risks in your context helps you decide how and when to use counter-surveillance tools.
What's consistent across contexts: the detection happens at the camera, not in a database somewhere. Preventing facial recognition means preventing the initial capture of a usable facial image — and that happens at the moment you're in frame.
The Capture Moment
Most privacy advice focuses on data deletion, opt-outs, and legal restrictions. These approaches all operate after your biometric data has already been captured and matched. The only intervention that works before data collection is physical — at the point of image capture.
AI Blocker's adversarial strip operates at this moment. It disrupts the face detection pipeline in the camera's AI system or the downstream recognition service, preventing a usable facial embedding from being generated in the first place.
Practical Use
The AI Blocker strip is designed for daily wear in exactly these environments. It looks unremarkable, adheres securely, and works continuously without any active management on your part. Wear it when you know you'll be in high-surveillance environments — or wear it every day, because in most cities, that's every day.
The AI Blocker adversarial strip is available now — designed for daily use, built on published adversarial ML research.
Get AI Blocker — $14.99