A new article by Moshe Greenshpan, founder of facial recognition company Face-Six, highlights how pro-privacy defense attorneys are turning to facial recognition technology to acquit wrongfully accused clients. Featuring firsthand interviews with lawyers and court cases — including a civil dispute over Israel's most iconic war photograph — the article challenges the dominant narrative by showing how facial recognition is being used not to surveil, but to serve justice.
BROOKLYN, N.Y., June 11, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Facial recognition technology has long been at the center of privacy debates, often portrayed in the media as a threat to civil liberties. However, a new article by Moshe Greenshpan, founder of facial recognition company , presents a fact-based counter-narrative: how defense attorneys are utilizing the same technology to protect the innocents, not incriminate them.
Titled "," the piece features exclusive interviews with Israeli attorneys, working with the Public Defender's Office, who have used AI-based facial recognition to acquit defendants by dismantling flawed eyewitness testimonies.
One of the cases involves a misidentified minor whose conviction was overturned after facial recognition exposed flaws in the prosecution's video evidence. Another highlights a civil court dispute over the identity of a paratrooper in one of Israel's most iconic historical photographs, which used multi-system facial recognition analysis.
Greenshpan, who has served as an expert witness in multiple court cases involving facial recognition technology, says the article is intended to spark a more nuanced public conversation.
Media Contact
Moshe Greenshpan, Face-Six, 1 9177750996, [email protected], Face-Six.com
SOURCE Face-Six
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