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United States·Technology

Disneyland adds facial recognition technology to some entrance lanes

Wednesday, 29 April 2026, 06:47 · 1 min read

Disneyland, the California theme park owned by the Walt Disney Company, has introduced facial recognition technology in select entrance lanes, with the company stating the system is designed to prevent ticket fraud and speed up re-entry for guests. Cameras capture visitors' images, which are converted into unique biometric values to verify identity; guests may opt out by choosing lanes without the technology. The move draws scrutiny amid a broader national debate over privacy and surveillance, with civil liberties advocates warning that the normalisation of face-scanning at entertainment venues sets a troubling precedent for public life.

Sources
The GuardianA whole new world: Disneyland adds facial recognition to some entrance lanes ↗︎
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