Skip to main content

Place your burger order with nothing but a smile at a facial-recognition kiosk

Introducing "FACE" the AI Kiosk
CaliBurger caused a stir not so long ago when it announced a plan to install burger-flipping robots inside
Recommended Videos
its restaurants. Clearly keen on using advances in technology to improve its service, the global fast-food chain is now planning to use facial-recognition kiosks that remember your previous selections so you can order in a couple of taps.

Besides speeding up the ordering process, the kiosk could also eliminate the chaos that can ensue at the counter when trying to place an order with kids or a group of friends.

CaliBurger’s kiosk is now being demoed at its Pasadena store and if successful could be rolled out to its locations worldwide in 2018.

Here’s how it works: Customers first need to activate a so-called “loyalty account,” which is easily done with a few taps on the kiosk’s display, and then place their first order.

When you make a return visit, the kiosk will ask you to “bring up your past orders” (perhaps not the best phrase for a restaurant to use) “by smiling at the camera.”

It will then display your previous selections whereupon you can request the same food or go for something new. Multiple visits will also earn you loyalty points called “CaliCoins” that you can collect with another quick smile before spending on your next order.

Once you’re done, simply complete the payment at  the kiosk and head over to the counter where your food will be waiting for you.

CaliBurger
CaliBurger

The next phase of the plan is to allow customers to “pay using their faces,” making the entire process even quicker.

“Our goal for 2018 is to replace credit card swipes with face-based payments,” the company said in a release. “Facial recognition is part of our broader strategy to enable the restaurant and retail industries to provide the same kinds of benefits and conveniences in the built world that customers experience with retailers like Amazon in the digital world.”

CaliBurger partnered with tech firm NEC Corporation of America to develop the facial recognition-enabled kiosk.

In a similar effort to make fast food even faster, KFC recently started testing a kiosk that scans your face so you can “smile to pay.” It’s another step toward a time when using cash, credits cards, and smartphones for payments will be a thing of the past, a time when a simple smile will allow us to make a purchase, though a grimace may feel more natural for some pricier items.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Amazon bans police from using facial recognition tech Rekognition for 1 year
Amazon Logo

Amazon has barred police from using its facial recognition technology for one year.

In a company blog post Wednesday, Amazon said it will implement a one-year "moratorium on police use of Amazon’s facial recognition technology" -- known as Rekognition.

Read more
IBM will no longer develop or research facial recognition tech
IBM's Summit Supercomputer

IBM CEO Arvind Krishna says the company will no longer develop or offer general-purpose facial recognition or analysis software. In a June 8 letter addressed to Congress and written in support of the Justice in Policing Act of 2020, Krishna advocates for new reforms that support the responsible use of technology -- and combat systematic racial injustice and police misconduct.

“IBM firmly opposes and will not condone uses of any technology, including facial recognition technology offered by other vendors, for mass surveillance, racial profiling, violations of basic human rights and freedoms, or any purpose which is not consistent with our values and Principles of Trust and Transparency,” wrote Krishna in the letter.

Read more
‘Dazzle’ makeup won’t trick facial recognition. Here’s what experts say will
martymoment CV dazzle

As demonstrators protest against racism and police brutality, some have suggested that extravagant makeup can block facial recognition technology they worry have been deployed by authorities.

But the creator of this “CV Dazzle” makeup style said the patterns, which were designed to fool an older method of facial detection, won't trick more sophisticated algorithms — though he and other experts said protesters can take steps to evade detection.

Read more