Madison Square Garden’s Facial Recognition Program Is Now a Civil Liberties Problem

Madison Square Garden scans 40 people per minute through AI cameras, creating digital dossiers on concert and game attendees

Alex Barrientos Avatar
Alex Barrientos Avatar

By

Image: Wikimedia Commons

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • MSG scans faces of 40 people per minute using AI-powered entrance cameras
  • Dolan bans 900-1,500 lawyers whose firms sued MSG from all venues
  • Facial recognition system assigns priority scores and tracks bathroom visits without consent

Walking into MSG for a Knicks game or Harry Styles concert means your face gets scanned, cataloged, and cross-referenced against watchlists before you reach your seat. As reported by Wired, since 2018, Madison Square Garden has deployed facial recognition technology at entrances, partnering with Xtract One’s SmartGateway system to process 40 people per minute through AI-powered cameras integrated with metal detectors. What began as security theater has morphed into something far more invasive, raising serious digital rights concerns.

The Technology Behind the Tracking

High-tech gates scan faces faster than you can buy overpriced nachos.

The SmartGateway system, powered by eConnect’s facial recognition software, creates instant digital dossiers on attendees. MSG’s “council” assigns priority scores to flagged faces—Priority 2 means “OBSERVE: DO NOT APPROACH”—turning venue security into algorithmic profiling. This technology affects innocent attendees too, with false positives creating unnecessary confrontations and ejections.

Critics face ejection based on owner James Dolan’s personal grudges. According to whistleblower lawsuits, security chief John Eversole allegedly tracked Nina Richards, a trans Knicks fan, second-by-second during a 2022 Pride Night game, logging her bathroom visits and interactions without any evidence of threat.

From Security to Personal Vendettas

Owner James Dolan weaponized surveillance against critics, lawyers, and fans who dare complain.

MSG has banned 900-1,500 lawyers from venues—anyone whose firm has sued the company gets flagged and ejected. The system monitors social media for “sell the team” chants, compiles investigative dossiers on critics, and extends surveillance beyond venue walls to neighborhood patrols. “Dolan quadrupling down on his use of facial recognition across MSG venues is pathetic,” says Will Owen of S.T.O.P., a surveillance accountability group.

Your Privacy Disappears at the Door

What happens at MSG doesn’t stay at MSG—your biometric data travels everywhere.

This isn’t isolated to one paranoid billionaire’s empire. MSG Entertainment operates Radio City Music Hall and the Las Vegas Sphere, spreading these practices across multiple states. Venues nationwide are watching MSG’s playbook, seeing how far surveillance can stretch before meaningful pushback, echoing patterns seen in broader tech scandals. While New York’s Attorney General investigates and Illinois requires biometric consent, most states offer zero protection.

Your face becomes data the moment you enter these venues. Choose accordingly.

Share this

At Gadget Review, our guides, reviews, and news are driven by thorough human expertise and use our Trust Rating system and the True Score. AI assists in refining our editorial process, ensuring that every article is engaging, clear and succinct. See how we write our content here →