Thank you so much. This is a great question.
I urge the committee to think about consent in a context in which consent takes place. Consent can often be much more complex than it looks from the outside. It's not always a yes or a no, or “no I don't want to do this, so I'm going to go to the next alternative”. Often, there are no alternatives. Often, there are financial pressures that people are facing that force them to comply with these kinds of protocols.
For example, the facial verification that's in place in many gig companies, there is no alternative. If they don't comply with facial verification, they're simply off the app.