In a quiet suburb of Tennessee, the AI and physical world collided with devastating consequences for a grandmother whose only crime was existing in a database.
Bunnings was reasonably entitled to use AI facial recognition technology to combat crime and staff abuse in its stores, the Administrative Review Tribunal finds.
'Yeah, they look close enough. Let's arrest them.' ...
A team of US Marshals arrested 50-year-old Lipps in Tennessee at gunpoint last July while she was babysitting four young children, writes InForum. She was booked ...
Angela Lipps spent nearly six months in jail after AI software linked her to a North Dakota bank fraud case ...
By Hera Rizwan This series was supported by the Pulitzer Center. The community health worker lifts her smartphone toward the woman's face and waits. The screen flashes: "Face not matched". She tries ...
FOOTBALL fans can expect to have their faces scanned by live facial recognition cameras in a bid to catch dangerous criminals ...
The hearing revealed that senators are paying close attention to how NIST’s work intersects with one of the most contentious ...
The Fargo Police Department has drawn criticism for jailing a woman for more than five months after artificial intelligence ...