Hacking Street Smarts: DeepScore Facial Judgement App

A corporation in Japan is making life easy for scam artists skilled at impression-management. The company claims their facial recognition app can give lenders a short-cut in street smarts.

From VICE News:
“Determine how trustworthy a person is in just one minute.” That’s the pitch from DeepScore, a Tokyo-based company that spent last week marketing its facial and voice recognition app to potential customers and investors at CES 2021.

Here's how it works: A person—seeking a business loan or coverage for health insurance, perhaps—looks into their phone camera and answers a short series of questions. Where do you live? How do you intend to use the money? Do you have a history of cancer? DeepScore analyzes the muscular twitches in their face and the changes in their voice and delivers a verdict to the lender or insurer. This person is trustworthy, this person is probably not.
It's apparent the founders are young and don't know that people who have had at least one bout with cancer are likely over the age of 30 and might be more trustworthy simply due to maturity.



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Further Reading:

This App Claims It Can Detect 'Trustworthiness.' It Can't:   vice.com

Say CHEESE: Common Human Emotional Expression Set Encoder and its Application to Analyze Deceptive Communication   hoques.com




This work by AJ Fish is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

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