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Facial Recognition

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Movies/Shows Silicon Valley
Air dateApril 22, 2018
Previous episode Tech Evangelist
Next episode Artificial Emotional Intelligence
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ID2035699
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About Facial Recognition


Overshadowed by Jared in an on-camera interview, Richard's confidence wavers further when Laurie and Monica force him to work with Eklow, a new artificial-intelligence company; Gavin questions his future beyond Hooli.

Shop owners hope that tech can deter thieves

Shop owners hope that tech can deter thieves
Nov 17,2023 1:11 am

... " We ve heard examples of businesses using Facial Recognition to prevent retail crimes, " says Tina McKenzie, Policy Chair of the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB), " but to many independent shop owners, this may seem like a luxury item - especially with soaring inflation and high interest rates...

Rise in shoplifting: ‘Her son was crying and hungry so she stole food'

Rise in shoplifting: ‘Her son was crying and hungry so she stole food'
Nov 15,2023 4:21 am

... Shoplifting will soon be treated like organised crime as part of a Police have committed to attending more crime scenes and using Facial Recognition software to target offenders after retailers complained of a failure to tackle a rise in shoplifting...

Beyoncé's Cardiff gig crowd was scanned for paedophiles

Beyoncé's Cardiff gig crowd was scanned for paedophiles
Nov 8,2023 12:11 pm

...By Shelley PhelpsBBC NewsFacial Recognition was used on crowds attending a Beyoncé concert in Cardiff to scan for paedophiles and terrorists...

Rishi Sunak: AI firms cannot 'mark their own homework'

Rishi Sunak: AI firms cannot 'mark their own homework'
Nov 1,2023 2:31 pm

... Speaking ahead of the event in London, US Vice President Kamala Harris said that world leaders " must address the full spectrum of AI risks to humanity" and listed examples of faulty algorithms in healthcare, the use of AI in making " deepfakes" misinformation and biased Facial Recognition...

Police to treat shoplifting like organised crime

Police to treat shoplifting like organised crime
Oct 23,2023 11:11 am

... Under the plan, police have committed to attend more crime scenes and use Facial Recognition to target offenders...

Supernova festival: How massacre unfolded from verified video and social media

Supernova festival: How massacre unfolded from verified video and social media
Oct 9,2023 4:31 pm

... BBC Verify has pieced together the events of the weekend s festival bloodbath using video and social media posts that we have verified, and Facial Recognition technology...

AI facial recognition: Campaigners and MPs call for ban

AI facial recognition: Campaigners and MPs call for ban
Oct 5,2023 7:31 pm

...By Imran Rahman-Jones & Liv McMahonTechnology reporters, BBC NewsPolice and private companies should " immediately stop" the use of Facial Recognition surveillance, says a group of politicians and privacy campaigners...

Police access to passport photos 'risks public trust'

Police access to passport photos 'risks public trust'
Oct 4,2023 7:21 am

... " But civil liberties groups, who have already raised concerns about the existing use of Facial Recognition technology by the police, said using passport photos risks exacerbating them...

China is getting smarter - but at what cost?

Sep 26,2023 10:41 am

Shenzhen has grown into a futuristic city in just 30 years

Thirty years ago, Shenzhen was a fishing village, surrounded by paddy fields.

Then came a plan to build China's first special economic zone to allow foreign investments, and out of The Quiet rural landscape grew private businesses and factories which over time transformed into a city.

Now Shenzhen, with a population of 12 million, is just One part of a huge urbanised area running down The Pearl River Delta .

China's smart cities ambitions are among the grandest in The World . But there are questions about whether their surveillance technologies will improve the quality of inhabitants' lives or Just Be used to keep a closer eye on them.

Clean city

By 2050, about 292 million more Chinese people will live in cities. Already More Than 58% of the population are urban dwellers, compared to just 18% in 1980.

According to The Authorities , there are 662 Chinese cities, including More Than 160 with a million people or more.

At the Smart Cities Expo in Barcelona recently, Shenzhen had One of biggest exhibits.

One of the big focuses for tech in Shenzhen is on traffic and How To ease congestion

Jiang Wei Dong, The General manager of The Local delegation told the BBC what technologies are powering The City .

They are, he said, "seriously focused on pollution".

"Compared to other cities, Shenzhen is clean," he added.

The City is The First in China to ensure that all buses and taxis on its roads are electric, he explained.

Alongside smarter transportation, there is a new smart healthcare system, which makes sure that when anyone comes to The City from a faraway province their health records are immediately accessible.

But when asked about security systems, his response was less enthusiastic.

"We are only familiar with traffic. For the citizens of Shenzhen there is no monitoring," he said.

But at a separate event in The City itself, The Public are being challenged to consider the speed at which surveillance tech is being rolled out.

Shenzhen's Futian Station is hosting Eyes of The City - an exhibition which poses the question: "What happens to people and the urban landscape when the sensor-imbued city is able to gaze back?"

Exhibits at The Eyes of The City show will highlight how smart city technologies are monitoring The Public

Among The Works on show are a Facial Recognition system that visitors can opt out of by wearing a special mask, and displays that look back at ticket holders, analysing their emotional responses.

"One of the main objectives of The Eyes of The City exhibition is to encourage visitors to take a stance, shunning The Dangerous option of neutrality," said the curator Carlo Ratti .

Data collection

China is creating new cities at an astonishing rate, redefining the urban landscape with plans to create 19 gigantic urban clusters and The World 's first super-city with More Than 40 million inhabitants.

Urban development on this scale will demand efficiency. Traffic will have to be controlled to avoid weeklong jams, and transport will have to be green to avoid killing everyone with CO2 emissions.

But there will also be a need for citizens themselves to be more efficient. Littering, playing music too loud on a train, running across The Road when the lights are Red - these will stop being minor indiscretions and become major inconveniences in cities So Large .

In 2014, the idea of a social credit system was unveiled. The somewhat Orwellian plan is to reward citizens for good behaviour and punish them for bad. In March this year, millions of discredited travellers were banned from buying train or plane tickets for a range of offences, such as using expired tickets or smoking on a train.

Social credit data lead to many being banned from Public Transport

"In China, the whole social scoring experiment is fascinating but I'm glad that I don't have To Live through it," said smart cities consultant Charles Reed Anderson.

Currently there is no unified social credit system. Instead local governments enforce the idea in different ways, which can sometimes have a knock-on effect on foreign visitors.

Mr Anderson told an anecdote about a friend who had recently visited a Chinese city.

"He got to his hotel and realised he had left [his phone in a taxi], so The Hotel walked him to The Police station," he explained.

"The Police pulled up the data about The Vehicle but didn't have the traffic cam so they took him to another department a few blocks away, and they were able to track the taxi in Real Time and called The Driver to ask him to bring back The Phone .

"Within two hours he had his phone back. "

"The Taxi Driver may have been worried that if he didn't return it, he was going to get a negative Score . "

Facial Recognition systems are becoming more prevalent

There has been huge criticism of The System but, says Mr Anderson, it probably feels far less creepy to Chinese citizens, who have grown up used to have their activities monitored by The State .

"I'm not 100 percent behind it - it can deliver some good things. But if it starts getting abused then it becomes a Major Problem ," he said.

Human Rights Watch revealed earlier this year that One social credit system being used in the Xinjiang region, home to a largely Muslim population, was linked to an app used by Chinese police and other government officials.

City brain

More and more data and information is falling into the hands of the government via sensors and other technology in cities.

But what happens when cities do deals with private tech giants such as Alibaba and Tencent, who themselves have vast databases of information on citizens?

Alibaba is headquartered in The Eastern city of Hangzhou and has spent two years developing a platform dubbed The City Brain, which analyses data from cameras and the GPS location of cars and buses, and uses it to control More Than One thousand traffic lights to prevent gridlock.

It claims it has helped drop The City of seven million people from the fifth most congested in China to 57th on The List .

Now cities are handing over chunks of land to tech firms.

The Shenzhen government has just awarded Tencent a small 809 sq m (8,708 sq ft) plot of reclaimed land in order to build what it describes as "a Future City focused on technology and Innovation ".

Google affiliate Sidewalk Labs plans to build a digital city in Toronto

And increasingly, Western cities are also doing deals with Chinese firms.

Councillors in Darwin, Australia travelled to China to meet Huawei and see its technology in Shenzhen. The Firm then implemented a $10m programme to Roll Out 900 smart LED lights, 24 environmental sensors and a network of 138 CCTV cameras.

Rejecting claims The City was going to implement a similar social credit scheme of its own, Lord Mayor Kon Vatskalis told Abc News that "there's no Facial Recognition . . and our cameras can't tell who you are or what you do".



privacy, cities, china, shenzhen, surveillance

Source of news: bbc.com

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