No More Smiling in Your Drivers License Pictures - Truck Trend Forums at Truck Trend Magazine

No More Smiling in Your Drivers License Pictures

  
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No More Smiling in Your Drivers License Pictures

 
bkong bkong
Enthusiast | Posts: 541 | Joined: 07/08
Posted: 05/27/09
08:34 AM

Looks like you can no longer combine that "just rolled out of bed" look with a glistening smile in your drivers license picture, in the name of identity theft protection. The new policy of no smiling in your drivers license picture has been implemented in four states so far, and could potentially reach more.

:
Stopping driver's license fraud is no laughing matter: Four states are ordering people to wipe the grins off their faces in their license photos.

"Neutral facial expressions" are required at departments of motor vehicles (DMVs) in Arkansas, Indiana, Nevada and Virginia. That means you can't smile, or smile very much. Other states may follow.

The serious poses are urged by DMVs that have installed high-tech software that compares a new license photo with others that have already been shot. When a new photo seems to match an existing one, the software sends alarms that someone may be trying to assume another driver's identity.

But there's a wrinkle in the technology: a person's grin. Face-recognition software can fail to match two photos of the same person if facial expressions differ in each photo, says Carnegie Mellon University robotics professor Takeo Kanade.

Dull expressions "make the comparison process more accurate," says Karen Chappell, deputy commissioner of the Virginia DMV, whose no-smile policy took effect in March.

Elaine Mullen of Great Falls, Va., bristled at the policy while renewing her license until she heard the reasoning. "It's probably safer from a national-security point of view," she says.

Arkansas, Indiana and Nevada allow slight smiles. "You just can't grin really large," Arkansas driver services chief Tonie Shields says.

A total of 31 states do computerized matching of driver's license photos and three others are considering it, says the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators. Most say their software matches faces regardless of expressions. "People can smile here in Pennsylvania," state Transportation Department spokesman Craig Yetter says.

In Illinois, photo matching has stopped 6,000 people from getting fraudulent licenses since the technology was launched in 1999, says Beth Langen, the state head of Drivers Services.




http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2009-05-25-licenses_N.htm  

 
Edward A. Sanchez Edward A. Sanchez
Moderator | Posts: 497 | Joined: 06/06
Posted: 05/27/09
08:53 AM

Something tells me this won't be a very hard policy to implement. After waiting in line for 2 hours, not many people are in a mood to smile.