Researchers Use Big Data And AI To Remove Legal Confidentiality
By harnessing these technologies in tandem, the study's authors could mine over 120,000 public legal records and then use an algorithm to identify connections between them.
In case you haven't heard, #ZAO is a Chinese app which completely blew up since Friday. Best application of 'Deepfake'-style AI facial replacement I've ever seen. Here's an example of me as DiCaprio (generated in under 8 secs from that one photo in the thumbnail) 🤯 pic.twitter.com/1RpnJJ3wgT— Allan Xia (@AllanXia) September 1, 2019
When Google puts 4 paid ads ahead of the first organic result for your own brand name, you’re forced to pay up if you want to be found. It’s a shakedown. It’s ransom. But at least we can have fun with it. Search for Basecamp and you may see this attached ad. pic.twitter.com/c0oYaBuahL— Jason Fried (@jasonfried) September 3, 2019
The Struggle to Make AI Less Biased Than Its Creators
The dirty little secret is out about artificial intelligence. No, not the one about machines taking over the world. That’s an old one. This one is more insidious. Data scientists, AI experts and others have long suspected it would be a problem. But it’s only within the last couple of years, as AI or some …
Analyzing and Preventing Unconscious Bias in Machine Learning
This article is based on Rachel Thomas’s keynote presentation, “Analyzing & Preventing Unconscious Bias in Machine Learning” at QCon.ai 2018. Thomas talks about the pitfalls and risk the bias in machine learning brings to the decision-making process. She discusses three use cases of machine learning bias.
🗑 I’d rather not have the trash bin know me personally @jblefevre60 #facialrecognition #ai #ml #recycling pic.twitter.com/QrUKxGXOCZ— Evan Kirstel (@evankirstel) September 1, 2019
just learned with horror that deleting any of the "family" emojis in google slides does not remove the emoji, but rather kills off each individual family member one by one, starting with the children pic.twitter.com/0v2s8Bx91n— Brooke Watson (@brookLYNevery1) August 29, 2019
The Plan to Use Fitbit Data to Stop Mass Shootings Is One of the Scariest Proposals Yet
In the aftermath of yet another mass shooting in America, loved ones grieve, gun control advocates call for common-sense reforms, and politicians suggest new “solutions” that won’t do anything about guns. These proposals frequently focus on mental health, but a new plan before the White House to monitor “neurobehavioral” predictors of violence isn’t just misguided, it’s terrifyingly dystopian.
What a mischievous technique to trick people into giving in all the data by accidentally clicking the wrong click of action. / cc: @harrybrhttps://t.co/oJUKIOiP09 pic.twitter.com/y3sGqtGpZt— Smashing Magazine (@smashingmag) August 30, 2019
[Update 08/20/2019: This project has 2 open positions for UROPs/visiting students or interns. One position focuses around electrical engineering, another one...
Dirty Data, Bad Predictions: How Civil Rights Violations Impact Police Data, Predictive Policing Systems, and Justice by Rashida Richardson, Jason Schultz, Kate Crawford :: SSRN
Law enforcement agencies are increasingly using predictive policing systems to forecast criminal activity and allocate police resources. Yet in numerous jurisdi
New normal — At least twice a month I have clients denied entry because of something in their WhatsApp. Most of the time its pictures or videos forwarded to them in a WhatsApp Group. Many tools being used to stop immigrants from legally entering. pic.twitter.com/ewIUswSCsy— Abed A. Ayoub (@aayoub) August 22, 2019
Visual Thinking: Jessica Helfand on Invention, the Studio as Sanctuary, and Being a Collector
By Julia Gamolina, cover portrait by Maggie Peters Jessica Helfand is an artist, designer, and writer. She is a co-founder of Design Observer, and the co-host of two podcasts: The Observatory , and The Design of Business | The Business of Design . She has
There is an urgency to AI ethics & accountability work, because there are currently real people being affected.AI is not just some futuristic issue.@rajiinio @DataInstituteSF pic.twitter.com/hqUpQYAxvS— Rachel Thomas (@math_rachel) August 20, 2019
Biometric Data Breach Could Link Your Face to Illegal Activities
The nature of how organizations capture and store the public’s biometric data, such as fingerprints and images of faces, came under renewed scrutiny this week by security experts and regulators.
Three things digital ethics can learn from medical ethics
Ethical codes, ethics committees, and respect for autonomy have been key to the development of medical ethics — elements that digital ethics would be advised to emulate.
Key Considerations for the Ethical Use of Facial Recognition Technology
Facial recognition technology has grown tremendously in both capability and availability over the last few years. It can help us solve difficult problems,