资讯

The Metropolitan Police’s use of live facial-recognition (LFR) technology is unlawful, according to UK equality watchdog, citing the need for deployments of the technology to be necessary, ...
Home Depot is accused of breaking the law by using facial recognition at self-checkout kiosks in Illinois. The Home Depot is facing a class-action lawsuit in Illinois for allegedly collecting ...
(WBFF) — As Baltimore Police investigate a string of burglaries in the Mount Washington neighborhood, Baltimore Council member Isaac "Yitzy" Schleifer voiced frustration with state laws surrounding ...
More live facial recognition (LFR) vans will be rolled out across seven police forces in England to locate suspects for crimes including sexual offences, violent assaults and homicides, the Home ...
The lawsuit alleges the company uses a form of artificial intelligence called “computer vision” to help mitigate theft by collecting data about customers’ facial geometry The Home Depot is facing a ...
The Milwaukee Police Department is considering a troubling proposal: trading 2.5 million images and data belonging to Milwaukee residents — mostly Black and Brown people — with a private “big data” ...
The two-day street festival is a celebration of Caribbean culture and attracts around 2 million revellers. Around 7,000 police officers and staff are on duty at the carnival each day - and the use of ...
The UK's equality regulator has criticised the Metropolitan Police's use of live facial recognition technology (LFR), saying the way it is being deployed is breaching human rights law. The tech works ...
If you're shopping at Home Depot, you might want to watch out for facial recognition at the check-out counter. Benjamin Jankowski, a resident of Chicago, Illinois, is taking Home Depot to court after ...
Rights groups have reacted angrily to the news that the government is expanding police use of live facial recognition (LFR) without adequate legislative safeguards. The Home Office yesterday announced ...
The Home Secretary has defended the Government’s expansion of live facial recognition technology as a “targeted” crackdown on high-harm offenders, amid concerns over privacy. Yvette Cooper denied the ...