People with stronger object recognition skills are better at spotting AI-generated faces, according to new research. Intelligence and AI familiarity did not predict performance.
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 ...
Your morning cup of java can wake your body up; can caffeine do the same thing for your face? Here’s what dermatologists say.
Residents and others are still raising concerns over the potential use of the controversial technology. MPD says it no longer plans to use the technology, and also announced the suspension of an ...
Unlock the power of event-driven architecture with AWS's innovative pattern for Amazon RDS SQL Server. This approach decouples database events from processing, enhancing scalability and responsiveness ...
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.” ...
Introduction The proliferation of deepfake technology, synthetic media generated using advanced artificial intelligence techniques, has emerged as a ...
Researchers find that "object recognition" ability, rather than intelligence or tech experience, determines who can best ...
Recognition highlights commitment to delivering strategic software solutions and long-term value for clients in the ...
Biometric locks like face recognition are convenient to set up—but because of a legal loophole, law enforcement can bypass them more easily than a traditional passcode. I review privacy tools like ...