Meta was previously reported to be exploring facial recognition for its smart glasses.
Code reviewed by WIRED uncovered an unreleased face-recognition system embedded in Meta’s smart glasses platform. It’s designed to identify people via biometric data stored on users’ phones.
A flaw in Hugging Face Transformers could allow malicious AI models to execute code, exposing credentials and highlighting AI supply chain risks.
An investigative report reveals that Meta licensed face recognition from Rank One, a Pentagon contractor, and built a system ...
Rank One, whose board includes a former CIA deputy director and a former FBI science chief, supplied face recognition to Meta ...
The wrongful arrest is just one of over a dozen in recent years linked to facial recognition technology.
A WIRED investigation claims Meta quietly embedded facial recognition technology into its smart glasses ecosystem, reviving privacy concerns around biometric surveillance and wearable AI. The Latest ...
A document from the Department of Homeland Security outlines plans to issue local police facial recognition technology used ...
A Florida man has filed a lawsuit against the Jacksonville Beach Police Department and other defendants after he was falsely arrested in connection with an alleged child-luring incident in November ...
A computer vision and machine learning system that performs face detection, face recognition, user authentication, and facial attribute analysis using YOLOv8, DeepFace, and facial embeddings.
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