Facial recognition is tracking customers as they shop in stores

Wouldn't you be scared that Alexa would release pics of your junk all over the internet?

I bet if you cheated on her with Google, you would be on a revenge porn site quite quickly.
Naw, Moonglow would be beaming with pride if Alexa released those pics.
I used to show it off before the internet....
So you were know to flash.
I was a stripper at 18...


A stripper bahahahahah
Yep, it was 1979 and the new craze of equal rights gave two women with a beer bar an idea, why not have male strippers for women and so yours truly turned 18 and applied on his birthday..to help finance his journey to college....
 
Naw, Moonglow would be beaming with pride if Alexa released those pics.
I used to show it off before the internet....
So you were know to flash.
I was a stripper at 18...


A stripper bahahahahah
Yep, it was 1979 and the new craze of equal rights gave two women with a beer bar an idea, why not have male strippers for women and so yours truly turned 18 and applied on his birthday..to help finance his journey to college....

You know, in the 80's when I was stationed in Norfolk, there was a bar like that in Virginia Beach called The Firehouse. Once a month, they would have Chippendale strippers come in, and no males were allowed in from 7 pm to 9:30. The Chippendale show ran from 7 to 9, and they wanted to give the ladies a bit of time to calm down before letting the guys in.

One of the best places to go was that bar. I remember the first time I walked in, a girl grabbed my hand, sat me down next to her, bought me a beer and then we dance a couple of songs and then went and made out in the parking lot.

The Firehouse was one of my favorite bars because of that. And Moonglow, it was dudes like you dancing on stage that made it possible.

Thank you.
 
Naw, Moonglow would be beaming with pride if Alexa released those pics.
I used to show it off before the internet....
So you were know to flash.
I was a stripper at 18...


A stripper bahahahahah
Yep, it was 1979 and the new craze of equal rights gave two women with a beer bar an idea, why not have male strippers for women and so yours truly turned 18 and applied on his birthday..to help finance his journey to college....
Did you look like Bart back then?
 
Seems like we might need to be concerned about junk recognition also!
 
I used to show it off before the internet....
So you were know to flash.
I was a stripper at 18...


A stripper bahahahahah
Yep, it was 1979 and the new craze of equal rights gave two women with a beer bar an idea, why not have male strippers for women and so yours truly turned 18 and applied on his birthday..to help finance his journey to college....
Did you look like Bart back then?
No spiked hair...
 
I used to show it off before the internet....
So you were know to flash.
I was a stripper at 18...


A stripper bahahahahah
Yep, it was 1979 and the new craze of equal rights gave two women with a beer bar an idea, why not have male strippers for women and so yours truly turned 18 and applied on his birthday..to help finance his journey to college....

You know, in the 80's when I was stationed in Norfolk, there was a bar like that in Virginia Beach called The Firehouse. Once a month, they would have Chippendale strippers come in, and no males were allowed in from 7 pm to 9:30. The Chippendale show ran from 7 to 9, and they wanted to give the ladies a bit of time to calm down before letting the guys in.

One of the best places to go was that bar. I remember the first time I walked in, a girl grabbed my hand, sat me down next to her, bought me a beer and then we dance a couple of songs and then went and made out in the parking lot.

The Firehouse was one of my favorite bars because of that. And Moonglow, it was dudes like you dancing on stage that made it possible.

Thank you.
No problem, we got gals and dough.. One place I could make a hundred bucks in three hours, in 1979 that was damn good money...The babes were okay too...
 
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REALITY CHECK

Facial Recognition Technologies Endanger Our Privacy
The Illinois law is so important because increasingly sophisticated technology is making it easier than ever to capture and match our faces–remotely, secretly, cheaply, and automatically. New cameras can capture our facial images at ever greater distances and with ever higher precision. New computer programs can match our facial images with ever greater accuracy. New interoperability systems allow this facial matching across ever more databases.

Our faces are readily accessible to other people, and most people must expose their faces to other people in order to participate in society. When we do so, there is very little that we can do as individuals to prevent other people from capturing the images of our faces and subjecting us to facial recognition technologies.

If someone stalks us or commits identify theft against us by using our passwords or credit card numbers, we can defend ourselves by simply changing those unique identifiers. We can even change our names. But contrary to what action movies suggest, we cannot change our faces.

The Danger of Corporate Facial Recognition Tech
 

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