Every day singularity looms closer. The future is here, and it’s pretty bloody terrifying.

A report published on Rolling Stone has detailed that the singer is experimenting with state-of-the-art-facing-recognition technology to combat stalkers.

Back in May, Taylor Swift played a concert at California’s Rose Bowl. The show featured a video screen kiosk that played clips from Swift’s rehearsals. Unbeknownst to fans, whilst they were enjoying behind-the-scenes footage of the Reputation extravaganza, a facial-recognition camera inside the kiosk was taking their photos.

Chief security officer of Oak View Group, Mike Downing, has explained: “Everybody who went by would stop and stare at it, and the software would start working.”

According to the report, these photos were then transferred to a Nashville “command post” to be cross-referenced with a database of the pop star’s stalkers.

Watch: Taylor Swift – Look What You Made Me Do

We’re still on the fence as to whether this is genius, or downright creepy. We’ll never experience Taylor Swift’s level of fame so who are we to judge. I mean Swift travels around in a suitcase to avoid Paparazzi, so are we really surprised?

This isn’t the first time facial recognition technology has been implemented in a concert setting. As the Rolling Stone report points out, earlier this year Ticketmaster invested in Blink Identity. Blink Identity is a facial-recognition startup that claims it can accurately and securely identify people walking past their monitors at full speed in half a second. Ticketmaster has plans to implement this technology so that fans can move through turnstiles swiftly and efficiently.

Earlier this year, Taylor Swift and Bryan Adams banded together to perform a cover of ‘Summer of ’69’, read all about it now.