Leaders | Nowhere to hide

What machines can tell from your face

Life in the age of facial recognition

THE human face is a remarkable piece of work. The astonishing variety of facial features helps people recognise each other and is crucial to the formation of complex societies. So is the face’s ability to send emotional signals, whether through an involuntary blush or the artifice of a false smile. People spend much of their waking lives, in the office and the courtroom as well as the bar and the bedroom, reading faces, for signs of attraction, hostility, trust and deceit. They also spend plenty of time trying to dissimulate.

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Nowhere to hide”

What machines can tell from your face

From the September 9th 2017 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition
Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum at her daily press conference in Mexico City, Mexico, May 13th 2025

Mexico’s government is throttling the rule of law

Elected judges will be bad for governance and good for gangs

Europe’s free-speech problem

J. D. Vance was right


Crypto has become the ultimate swamp asset

An industry that dreamed of being above politics has become synonymous with self-dealing


Is Donald Trump a good dealmaker?

Amid a flurry of moves, the president is turning America into the world’s broker, not its underwriter 

Stop-gap deals do not mean Donald Trump’s trade war is over

Barriers between America and China are still far too high. So is uncertainty

How to handle the AI manager. Advice from our new podcast

For tips on good management, listen to the latest season of “Boss Class”