this post was submitted on 11 Feb 2026
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Privacy

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Australia's Privacy Commissioner Carly Kind determined in 2024 that Bunnings breached privacy laws by scanning hundreds of thousands of customers' faces without their proper consent.

A review of that decision by the Administrative Review Tribunal of Australia has now found the opposite

The retailer did not break the law by scanning customers' identities, but should improve its privacy policy and notify customers of the use of AI-based facial recognition technology, the ruling said

Petty typical stuff by this point. The privacy-invading company wins, pissweak government makes a few privacy "recommendations" but stops short of enforcing anything

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[–] Tenderizer78@lemmy.ml 6 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 4 hours ago)

They look at CCTV, take an violentcustomer.jpeg, and add it to the database.

EDIT: Oh I see what you're asking. You misread my quote, what I said is "they only scan for" and not "they only scan".