Apart from collecting more than 1,500 artworks from 70 national museums and galleries worldwide, Arts & Culture, a Google application for exploring art exhibitions, also has a photo comparison function that allows users to upload their own selfies According to Sebastian Smee, an art critic, the intention of Google to make this App is to spread more artistic and cultural heritage to all parts of the world , But also achieved some immediate effect as soon as the self-portrait function came in, as there was never a chance in history to bring so many well-known and unknown paintings to the scene in a short time and he even said that museum staff could wash and sleep. It is considered that the Selfie function meets the current trend of convergence of various factors at present: the irony of art, the vanity of self-photographer, the obsession with statistical score, the curiosity of digging treasure online, The pure pleasures that come here also show that people are willing to simply hand out some key personal information to However, the Selfie feature of Arts & Culture is not yet available in the states of Illinois and Texas in the U.S.A. NPR interviewed Northwestern University about how biometric privacy laws affect technology companies, Law professor Matthew Kluger. As biomedical privacy laws in Illinois and Texas state that if technology companies want to collect biometrics, they must provide what biometrics will do and get permission from the parties, so Google in both The state banned Arts & Culture's ability to upload self-portraits over art portraits, but Google still disclaims disclaimers within the App to state that 'users' photos will not be used for any other purpose and will only be searched for Kluger believes that Google did so because of cautiousness in that regard, and while Google did not explain the reasons for not opening up the feature in both states, Google was involved Some privacy lawsuits have been filed and they may be concerned that caring individuals will upload photos of others without their consent. luger and said it is associated with home security cameras such as Nest, one of the smart security companies that was banned in Illinois and Nest's parent Google Inc. Kluger also said that Illinois has a stockpile of living creatures The featured company is in the process of bankruptcy, and people are concerned about whether the data are being diverted for other purposes. Illinois law is designed to avoid this effect.