The Web photograph

The Web

Use attributes for filter !
Active from1967
Active until 1971
Record labels Deram Records
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1793463
Send edit request

About The Web


The Web were a British jazz/blues band, with a style simultaneously related to America's West Coast groove and UK's proto-prog movement. Hailing from the British psychedelic scene, their style is often described as atmospheric, moody, melancholy, and dark.

Feminist icon Gloria Steinem on 'lethal' desire to control wombs

Feminist icon Gloria Steinem on 'lethal' desire to control wombs
Dec 1,2023 10:41 pm

... " The problem with the internet is that it s discriminatory, because not everyone can afford to have a computer or understands the technology or knows how to express themselves on The Web...

After a year of Elon Musk, what's next for X?

After a year of Elon Musk, what's next for X?
Oct 26,2023 9:41 pm

... " Basically everything is down on a year-over-year basis, " said David Carr, from The Web analytics firm SimilarWeb...

South Africa egg shortage: How poultry products became a hot commodity

South Africa egg shortage: How poultry products became a hot commodity
Oct 10,2023 10:41 pm

... Online shopping sites are no better - several consumers hoping to buy eggs on The Web have been met with " unavailable" or " low in stock" messages...

Google antitrust trial: Tech giant denies abusing power to gain monopoly

Google antitrust trial: Tech giant denies abusing power to gain monopoly
Sep 12,2023 4:51 pm

... " There are lots of ways users access The Web, other than through default search engines, and people use them all the time, " the company s lawyer, John Schmidtlein, said...

Threads: Meta to launch web version of flagging Threads app

Threads: Meta to launch web version of flagging Threads app
Aug 22,2023 9:51 am

... Meta says The Web version is part of a drive to deliver new features but experts warn more needs to be done to rebuild customer interest...

Wildfire evacuees frustrated by Facebook news ban in Canada

Wildfire evacuees frustrated by Facebook news ban in Canada
Aug 17,2023 7:01 pm

... " Oftentimes this means you don t get the whole story, or have to go searching The Web for verification...

Terrorism: What's behind surge in arrests of under-18s?

Terrorism: What's behind surge in arrests of under-18s?
Aug 3,2023 6:01 am

... " And we know young people are exploring dark corners of The Web...

Paris 2024 Olympics: Concern over French plan for AI surveillance

Paris 2024 Olympics: Concern over French plan for AI surveillance
Jul 19,2023 2:11 am

... What were supposed to be special security arrangements for the special circumstances of the games, ended up being normalised, " says Noémie Levain, of the digital rights campaign group La Quadrature du Net (Squaring The Web)...

Paris 2024 Olympics: Concern over French plan for AI surveillance

Jul 10,2023 7:31 pm

Abandoned luggage and unexpected crowds - real-time cameras will use Artificial Intelligence (AI) to detect suspicious activity on The Streets of Paris during next summer's Olympics. But civil rights groups say The technology is a threat to civil liberties, as The Bbc 's Hugh Schofield reports.

" We Are not China; we do not want to be Big Brother , " says François Mattens, whose Paris-based AI company is bidding for part of The Olympics video surveillance contract.

Under a recent Law , police will be able to use CCTV algorithms to Pick Up anomalies such as crowd rushes, fights or unattended bags.

The Law explicitly rules out using Facial Recognition technology, as adopted by China, for example, in order to trace " suspicious" individuals.

But opponents say it is a thin end of The Wedge . Even though The experimental period allowed by The Law ends in March 2025, they fear The French government's real aim is to make The new security provisions permanent.

" We've seen this before at previous Olympic Games Like in Japan, Brazil and Greece. What were supposed to be special security arrangements for The special circumstances of The Games , ended up being normalised, " says Noémie Levain, of The digital rights campaign group La Quadrature du Net (Squaring The Web ).

A version of The new AI security system is already in place in some police stations around France. One of The Pioneers is The southern Paris suburb of Massy.

" Around The Town we have 250 security cameras - Far too many for our team of four to monitor, " says Massy's mayor Nicolas Samsoen.

" So The AI device monitors all The cameras. And when it sees something it's been told to look out for - Like a sudden grouping of People - it raises an alert.

" It's then up to The Humans - The Police Officers - to examine The Situation and see what should be The appropriate action. Maybe it's something serious, maybe it's not.

" The important thing is that it's Humans who make The ultimate decision about How To React - not The computer. The Algorithm is empowering Humans .

As a test, we abandoned a piece of luggage on The Street not Far from The Police Station . Thirty seconds later The Alarm was raised and CCTV footage of The Suitcase popped up on The Control Room screen.

Previously of course The Algorithm has had to be taught what an abandoned piece of luggage looks Like - which is where The AI comes in. The developers have fed The programme a massive bank of different images of lone bags on The Street - a bank which continues to grow as more images accumulate.

Crucially though, this " learning" process does not happen at The Client interface but only in The " back-office" at The developers. Massy Police Station has bought a self-standing Product which monitors The cameras, but cannot itself acquire new knowledge.

Detecting unattended luggage is a relatively easy task. Much harder might be spotting a person on The ground in a crowd; or seeing The lump in a person's clothes that is a Concealed Weapon ; or differentiating between The Beginning of a fight and an innocent temporary increase in crowd density.

A French start-up specialising in Computer Vision software, The XXII group, is waiting for further specifications from The French government before fine-tuning their bid for part of The Olympics video surveillance contract.

" We expect The government to want The AI to be able to detect fire, fighting, People on The ground and abandoned luggage, " says XXII's François Mattens. " But they need to get their act together.

" In Theory The new systems are supposed to be in place for The Rugby World Cup [in France] in September. But that is absolutely out of The question. It is all going to take a lot of time to put in place. "

BBC

François Mattens and other developers are alive to The criticism that they are enabling Unacceptable Levels of state surveillance. But they insist on The safeguards.

" We will not - and cannot by Law - provide Facial Recognition , so this is a wholly different operation from what you see in China, " he says.

" What makes us attractive is that we provide security, but within The framework of The Law and ethics. "

But according to digital rights activist Noémie Levain, this is only a " narrative" that developers are using to sell their Product - Knowing full well that The government will almost certainly favour French companies over foreign firms when It Comes to awarding The Olympics contracts.

" They say it makes all The difference that here there will be no Facial Recognition . We say it is essentially The same, " she says.

" AI video monitoring is a surveillance tool which allows The State to analyse our bodies, our behaviour, and decide whether it is normal or suspicious. Even without Facial Recognition , it enables mass control.

" We see it as just as scary as what is happening in China. It's The same principle of losing The Right to be anonymous, The Right to act how we want to act in public, The Right not to be watched. "

This Week Bbc News is focussing on AI, how The technology affects our lives and what impacts it may have in The near future.

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯