facialrecognition

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  • Frédéric Bisson/Flickr

    China uses facial recognition to monitor ethnic minorities

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    01.18.2018

    China is adding facial recognition to its overarching surveillance systems in Xinjiang, a Muslim-dominated region in the country's far west that critics claim is under abusive security controls. The geo-fencing tools alert authorities when targets venture beyond a designated 300-meter safe zone, according to an anonymous source who spoke to Bloomberg.

  • Samsung

    Samsung's next-gen chips point to Galaxy S9 face detection

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    01.04.2018

    Samsung has unveiled its next-generation smartphone chip that will give its upcoming Galaxy S9 some iPhone X-like features, including face unlocking and animated emojis. The Exynos 9810 is built on its second-generation 10-nanometer fabrication tech, and will outperform the current flagship Exynos 8895 chip by up to 100 percent in single-core mode, Samsung said. The chip is likely to be sold in Asia, while US and European customers will get the Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 chip.

  • Tomohiro Ohsumi via Getty Images

    Olympic organizers may use facial recognition to manage guests

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    12.28.2017

    Japan is looking for a different way to confirm the identity of the hundreds of thousands of athletes, officials and journalists who will be attending the 2020 Olympics. The Japan Times reports that sources close to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic organizing committee say organizers are planning to utilize facial recognition technology. Not including spectators, attendees are expected to number in the 300,000 to 400,000 range and officials are concerned that ID sharing or theft will reduce the Games' safety. Facial recognition technology could get around those issues while also reducing entrance waiting times.

  • Petar Kujundzic / Reuters

    WeChat accounts could double as state IDs in China

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    12.27.2017

    Some WeChat users in China will soon be able to use the chat app as a state-issued ID card. Financial Times reports that those living in Guangdong's capital city Guangzhou will be able to use facial recognition to link their identities to the app in the Nansha district this week. The feature will apparently roll out across the country in January.

  • The Cali Group

    CaliBurger’s new kiosk uses facial recognition to take orders

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    12.21.2017

    Cashier-less ordering kiosks are becoming more and more commonplace at fast food restaurants like Wendy's and McDonald's. But Golden State burger chain CaliBurger is taking that one step further: its new self-ordering kiosks use AI and facial-recognition technology to order, pay and log into the chain's loyalty/rewards program. It'll even remember your crazy custom order to boot.

  • Dave Thompson/PA Images

    Australia may offer facial recognition data to telecoms and banks

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    11.26.2017

    The concerns over government facial recognition systems don't just revolve around the possibility of Orwellian control -- it's that they may share that data with others you don't completely trust. Australia is learning this first-hand. The Guardian has obtained documents showing that the country's Attorney General office is talking to telecoms and banks about testing private use of the Facial Verification Service in 2018. Companies would need to get your permission and would have to show that they're honoring Australia's Privacy Act, but they could otherwise use it to fight fraud or otherwise verify the identities of their customers.

  • 4x6 via Getty Images

    Homeland Security wants to scan your face at the border

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    11.02.2017

    Maybe Apple has the right idea when it comes to the future of identification, with Face ID built into the new iPhone X. The Department of Homeland Security wants to scan the faces of people entering or leaving the country, without needing to have anyone get out of their cars. The DHS's Silicon Valley office is hosting an "industry day" on November 14th to find ways to do just that, even if folks are wearing sunglasses and hats or the driver is looking away from the cameras.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    The future of surveillance is hidden in airport ads

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    10.13.2017

    Public anonymity is quickly becoming a thing of the past. Coming soon to an airport in Dubai is an artsy, colorful video security and customs tunnel that scans your face, adds you to a database, indexes you with artificial intelligence and decides if you're free to leave -- or not. By the end of summer 2018, Dubai International Airport's Terminal 3 will have replaced its security-clearance counter with a walkway tunnel filled with 80 face-scanning cameras disguised as a distracting immersive video.

  • PornHub

    Pornhub is improving search with an AI porn addict

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    10.11.2017

    NSFW Warning: This story may contain links to and descriptions or images of explicit sexual acts. One of the (many) problems that porn websites that rely upon user-generated content have, is that its one-handed users often don't respect proper database use. As a consequence, you may have thousands of clips, all described with the same five words and two tags. That makes discovery and cataloging a problem, especially if you're looking for videos to cater to your very specific niche or favorite performer.

  • Satish Kumar for 'The National'

    Dubai airport will scan your face as you walk through a video tunnel

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    10.10.2017

    A lot of passengers come and go through Dubai airports and by 2020, they're expected to play host to some 124 million people. So in an effort to increase the efficiency of security checkpoints, Dubai International Airport is installing a tunnel outfitted with 80 facial recognition and iris scanning cameras, The National reports. The tunnel's walls can display things like virtual aquariums or deserts as well as advertisements and passengers would just have to walk through as they normally would. At the end of the tunnel, a display will either tell the passenger to have a nice trip or will alert officials to take another look.

  • artoleshko via Getty Images

    Facebook reportedly tests facial recognition to recover your account

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    09.29.2017

    Your face is getting a lot of attention lately. The iPhone X's Face ID is a recent example, as is Android Pay's reportedly upcoming facial authentication for loyalty programs. Airports may soon use the tech to help streamline boarding and security lines, though there are still privacy concerns over the implementation. Still, that hasn't deterred Facebook from testing "a facial recognition feature to help secure your account," according to a tweet from TheNextWeb's Matt Navarra.

  • shutterstock

    Moscow is adding facial recognition to CCTVs to ID criminals

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    09.29.2017

    Moscow's local authorities are giving the city's 170,000 security cameras a power-up. According to Bloomberg, they're adding facial recognition tech to the CCTV network with the intention of IDing criminals on the streets. Moscow's extensive network of security cams have been keeping an eye on the city and recording millions of hours of video since 2012. Processing all that footage proved to be a daunting task, however: police officers quickly realized that it was impossible to look through them all to find culprits to arrest. Authorities believe facial recognition is the answer to that problem.

  • Apple

    Apple’s Face ID replaces Touch ID on the iPhone X

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    09.12.2017

    Apple has just revealed Face ID, a new facial recognition feature that will make its debut on the iPhone X. The technology is powered by what the company calls a True Depth camera system, which is made up of a bunch of sensors that detect your face, even in the dark, and let you unlock your iPhone by simply looking at it. Altogether, Face ID uses ambient light, infrared and proximity sensors, as well as a flood illuminator, speaker, microphone and, of course, the front camera to make the "magic" happen. Meanwhile, a newly minted, dual-core A11 Bionic neural engine will process that information.

  • 9to5Mac/Apple

    The next iPhone creates animated emoji from your facial expressions

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    09.09.2017

    You may already know that the next iPhone will use face detection for all kinds of clever tricks, but here's one you probably weren't expecting: customized emoji. The 9to5Mac crew has discovered that leaked "gold master" iOS 11 firmware includes references to 'Animoji,' or 3D emoji that you create using your facial expressions and voice. Pick one of the familiar non-human faces in the emoji library and it'll map your eye, mouth and cheek expressions to that character -- you can make a robot smile or have a dog raise its eyebrows. Even the poo emoji can be animated. This comes across as a gimmick (we can see many people dropping this once the novelty wears off), but it shows what's possible now that Apple has face tracking at its disposal. And there's more to the leak than just emoji.

  • VCG via Getty Images

    You can pay at a restaurant by smiling at a camera

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    09.03.2017

    As easy as it is to make purchases in the era of tap-to-pay services, it's about to get easier still. Alipay (which handles purchases for Chinese shopping giant Alibaba) has launched what it says is the first payment system that uses facial recognition to complete the sale. If you visit one of KFC's KPRO restaurants in Hangzhou, China, you can pay for your panini or salad by smiling at a camera-equipped kiosk -- you need to verify the purchase on your phone, but you don't have to punch in digits or bring your phone up to an NFC reader.

  • Engadget

    Your face might do more than just unlock the new iPhone

    by 
    Mat Smith
    Mat Smith
    08.01.2017

    Apple's latest secret leak was from its own documentation -- and it's given plenty for developers to chew over. The latest code snippets shared by Guilherme Rambo and Steve Troughton-Smith offer all kinds of tantalising details that may (almost certainly) come with that new iPhone -- whichever model that may be. Not only are there further suggestions that the physical Home button will be ditched, but according to Troughton-Smith, some pointers inside the firmware for Apple's incoming HomePod suggest that a new iPhone could have a screen with a resolution far beyond that found existing models, as well as mentions of facial expression detection.

  • AOL, Roberto Baldwin

    Nest’s overpriced IQ camera highlights the faults of facial recognition

    by 
    Roberto Baldwin
    Roberto Baldwin
    07.19.2017

    Nest burst onto the scene with a thermostat that was easy to use, had a slick interface, came with actual smart features and didn't look like someone just taped an off-white box to your wall. It followed that up with a less exciting but possibly more important smoke-and-carbon-monoxide detector. Then instead of building its own camera, it bought Dropcam, changed the name, added some cloud features and tada, the Nest Cam.

  • Bloomberg via Getty Images

    You’ll need to show your face to use ATMs in Macau

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    06.29.2017

    Macau, the gambling capital of the world, is upgrading all 1,200 of its ATMs with facial recognition cameras. According to Bloomberg, any user looking to make a withdrawal will need to enter their PIN and then stare into a lens for six seconds to verify your identity. The move is partly to improve bank security, but mostly to enable China to keep an eye on who's doing what with their cash, and when.

  • BananaStock

    Facial recognition software can sense when a sheep is in pain

    by 
    Swapna Krishna
    Swapna Krishna
    06.02.2017

    Animals can't tell us when they're in pain, so owners and veterinarians have to rely on other cues to help treat animals in discomfort. But determining that amount of pain might have just gotten easier: Researchers at the University of Cambridge used facial recognition software to figure out the amount of pain a sheep is in simply by looking at it. When a sheep is hurting, it makes certain predictable facial expressions. It's so reliable, in fact, that scientists recently introduced the Sheep Pain Facial Expression Scale (SPFES) to easily determine the amount of pain a sheep feels. However, training humans to read these facial expressions and tics is time consuming; that's where the computer comes in.

  • Doris Tsao/Caltech

    Scientists now know how your brain differentiates faces

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    06.02.2017

    Researchers at Caltech have taken a huge step in figuring out how the brain processes faces. In a study published this week in Cell, the team found that the brain only needs around 200 neurons to differentiate faces from each other.