> Microsoft wanted me to confirm my age, that I was a "real person" along with identity. So Microsoft somehow reached out to the police department, based on my address information in my Microsoft accounts, with a check of some kind. I had to go to the local police department to verify who I was and my age. The police department told me it was odd. They are just following up on Microsoft complaint. This happened a few or so years ago. Microsoft confirmed my identity then. However, the Microsoft account profile photo issue still exists today.<p>You what now???
That sounds like straight up scammer behavior. "Yes, this is Microsoft calling. We need to confirm your info with the local authorities."
> The police department told me it was odd. They are just following up on Microsoft complaint.<p>Since when does your local police department respond to a "Microsoft complaint?"
they dont. and microsoft doesnt contact local police. this post is dubious.<p>if its CSAM related (which is implied via photodna involvement), microsoft does not contact local police. they contact NCMEC (or the appropriate equivalent), who then coordinates the law enforcement response.<p>if it isnt CSAM, microsoft does not contact local police to aid with support, because that would be ridiculous to coordinate over a billion accounts across tens of thousands of police departments around the world. and police forces would obviously not tolerate acting as microsoft support personnel.<p>there has to be a <i>substantial</i> amount of missing context, or this story is (partially? fully?) fabricated, or the user is mistaken/wasnt talking to microsoft.
That's what I'm saying! That is WILD.
Home Depot™ Presents the Police!®
> Microsoft's PhotoDNA scanning is not just in OneDrive, through the Microsoft's eco-system. Basically, if you are using your Microsoft account to sign in to Windows 11, PhotoDNA scans your entire computer. This information came directly from Microsoft Support.<p>This sounds like a horrible privacy violation. Is it true? What do they do if they find a match?
the police part makes me really question what is going on here and the validity of this report.<p>if you get multiple child sexual abuse material (CSAM) matches, the police will be knocking on (down) your door. microsoft isnt going to nicely ask you to go down the the police station. they dont even contact local police, they forward the information to the appropriate national entity (e.g. NCMEC) who coordinates the law enforcement response.<p>and if it isnt CSAM related, microsoft is not going to be contacting your local police, period.<p>something isnt adding up here. i suspect this post is ragebait.
Wait, reading between the lines it thinks his face is CSAM?<p>I guess its a hash collision, but that is pretty crazy. Sounds like the plot to a scifi dystopia.
The perceptual hashes used for this kind of thing are, necessarily, much more susceptible to collisions than cryptographic hashes - so it's not out of the question at all.
That's my guess as well. Could be a collision, or it might be he's in a corpus. Or he's been RATed and is not talking to Microsoft at all. I wasn't aware they required face pics to provide service.
No, TFA says the picture was associated to an old account that got flagged - presumably anything linked to that account, picture included, is now cursed.
> dystopia<p>Coming soon to every AI enabled product near you
This is why I regularly reset my face.
Does this mean a Windows PC associated with a Microsoft account will scan images accessible on mapped file shares?
So... microsoft thinks he is too hot for them.
Is it a specific picture of the face or any picture of it?
> I just do not know what to about it any longer. Each time I create a new Microsoft account<p>There’s your problem. Don’t create a Microsoft account? Why would you need one anyway? To use windows? Why? Get Linux or switch to Mac.
Ooph, what midlevel SWE at MS did he rub the wrong way..?
>I had at least 12 Microsoft accounts immediately closed<p>What?
What what?<p>I take it you're not one of the many people who've had a dozen different services over the years get bought up by Microsoft, then forcefully migrated to multiple Microsoft Accounts, and then lose access to all of them?
Why does he keep using that picture?
The whole point of PhotoDNA (CSAM scanner) is that it can detect variations of photos without them being identical and without having CSAM to directly compare it to.
It's his face
Wrong question. Why does he continue to do business with a company who clearly doesn't want him?