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TechnologyPublished: 10 July 2026 at 13:38

Alarm over launch of facial recognition in UK shops that instantly alerts police

Facewatch, a facial recognition system used by over 100 UK retailers, will soon alert police in real time about serious offenders, prompting civil liberties groups to warn of a dangerous escalation in surveillance.

Foto: The Guardian World

Facial recognition technology in UK shops will soon alert police in real time to the presence of serious offenders, with civil liberties groups warning of a “dangerous escalation” towards surveillance and criminalisation in the retail sector.

Facewatch, a facial recognition system used by more than 100 businesses including Sainsbury’s, B&M and Spar to monitor thieves, said it was launching a UK-first feature to “alert police instantly when the most serious offenders trigger a live facial recognition match”.

The company’s chief executive, Nick Fisher, said the “unique technical development” would be launched in autumn and would warn police in an average of four seconds when the “worst offenders” were flagged on its network.

Civil liberties groups have voiced alarm at the development, saying it had “shot on far ahead of the regulation” and was “upending” the way retail crime was dealt with.

Charlie Whelton, the policy and campaigns officer at Liberty, said it was concerned about this “untested, opaque development” and the way facial recognition technology had been allowed to “proliferate without anything to govern it”.

“It’s not against the law to walk into a shop even if you’ve committed crimes in the past,” he said. “The idea of calling the police on somebody who hasn’t committed a crime, but there’s a concern they might, is really upending the way we do things.”

A number of people have been forced to leave shops after being falsely identified by Facewatch technology as a shoplifter, with some describing it as “Orwellian” and saying they felt as though they were “guilty until proven innocent”.

Evidence suggests black and Asian people are more likely to be incorrectly identified than white people. Britain’s biometrics watchdogs have also warned that national oversight of facial recognition is lagging behind the rapid expansion of the technology across police forces and the retail sector.

Sarah Lasoye, the pre-crime programme manager at Open Rights Group, said the technology was “entrenching a climate of surveillance across public life”. She argued it failed to address the root causes of shoplifting and “only served to further criminalise working-class communities”.

The use of the Facewatch technology looks set to quickly expand, with Sainsbury’s recently announcing plans to increase its use from 55 stores to more than 200 by the end of the year.

Facewatch said it alerted retailers almost 300,000 times that a “known repeat offender” had entered a store during the first six months of 2026, and that its system allowed staff to intervene “before theft, abuse or violence could occur or escalate”.

Office for National Statistics figures for England and Wales show there were 509,566 shoplifting offences in the year ending December 2025, and the British Retail Consortium has warned that violence, abuse and theft is “spiralling out of control”. But experts argue the use of facial recognition technology in shops to catch shoplifters is disproportionate.

Nuala Polo, the UK public policy lead at the Ada Lovelace Institute, said there were less intrusive means to catch shoplifters without scanning millions of faces daily virtually without consent. She added it was concerning that government plans for a legal framework for facial recognition technology would not apply to the private sector, creating a discrepancy.

The campaign group Big Brother Watch has criticised police for “inserting themselves into this cowboy operation” and said people would be matched against “a secret blacklist compiled by unaccountable businesses and private security guards”.

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