On June 10, 2026, the European Commission published the Code of Practice on Transparency of AI-Generated Content. It has not ...
Abstract: Pyramid Temporal Hierarchy Network (PTH-Net) is a new paradigm for dynamic facial expression recognition, applied directly to raw videos, without face detection and alignment. Unlike the ...
A document from the Department of Homeland Security outlines plans to issue local police facial recognition technology used by federal immigration agents, a move that will expand the scope of ICE ...
Earlier this year, the New York Times reported that Meta was developing software for its smart glasses to identify people, presumably using data from its social networks, such as Facebook and ...
An investigative report reveals that Meta licensed face recognition from Rank One, a Pentagon contractor, and built a system called NameTag into an app on 50 million phones before deleting it.
WIRED reported that Meta's app for Ray-Ban smart glasses contained dormant facial recognition code, raising transparency and privacy concerns. The investigation described "NameTag," designed to detect ...
Dormant face-recognition code reportedly appeared in Meta’s smart glasses app, then disappeared after scrutiny. That has put Meta’s AI eyewear plans back under the privacy spotlight.
Abstract: In biometrics, the secure transfer and storage of biometric samples are important for protecting the privacy and security of the data subject. One of the methods for authentication while ...
Only a day after a dormant bit of code that seemed to be a facial recognition algorithm was discovered in a companion app for ...
Last week, Wired reported that Meta quietly pushed code for a yet-to-be-released face-recognition system supposedly designed for the company’s smart glasses. Now the publication reports that Meta has ...
The code WIRED identified is gone from the latest version of Meta AI, the companion app for the company’s smart glasses. Meta won’t say why or whether it’s coming back.