The flood of computer-generated images across advertising and social media is, subconsciously, getting people used to seeing AI faces.
Sheriff Denita Ball said she decided not to move forward with a facial recognition technology deal after community concerns were raised.
Residents and others are still raising concerns over the potential use of the controversial technology. The Milwaukee Police Department says it no longer plans to use the technology and also ...
Yves Jeanrenaud is a scholar and amateur software developer behind Nearby Glasses, an open-source smart glasses detection app ...
Researchers have exposed OpenAI's covert Persona watchlist, active since 2023, screening users for government agencies via 53 ...
It's no secret that OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is losing money at a rapid clip. Some estimates suggest the company ...
Homeland Security aims to combine its face and fingerprint systems into one big biometric platform—after dismantling ...
Opinion

Frictionless fascism

Flynn Coleman is a human rights attorney and the author of “A Human Algorithm: How Artificial Intelligence Is Redefining Who We Are.” ...
Leaders of foreign countries h ave visited the famous Tirupati-Tirumala Temple in southern India, but a video shared by Indian media outlets does not show former Indonesian president Joko Widodo going ...
In an internal memo last year, Meta said the political tumult in the United States would distract critics from the feature’s release. By Kashmir Hill Kalley Huang and Mike Isaac Kashmir Hill reported ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Milwaukee's Fire and Police Commission (FPC) holds a public hearing on facial recognition technology used by the Milwaukee Police ...