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Fast Company Neal Ungerleider |
Privacy Advocates Boycott Facial Recognition Negotiations The U.S. government's efforts to build a code of conduct for facial recognition software creators has hit a major snag. |
Popular Mechanics June 30, 2008 Erik Sofge |
FBI's Next-Gen ID Databank to Store Face Scans--A Good Idea? Lockheed Martin is building a massive digital warehouse of criminal information, set to bring facial recognition and eye scans to local law enforcement. Privacy advocates say there's reason for law-abiding citizens to worry. |
PC Magazine June 13, 2011 Chloe Albanesius |
Privacy Groups Request FTC Probe of Facebook Facial Recognition Tech A D.C.-based privacy group has asked the Federal Trade Commission to examine Facebook's facial-recognition technology. |
Reason April 2002 Jeremy Lott |
Fake IDs Facial recognition technology is often billed as a tradeoff between privacy and security. A recent American Civil Liberties Union report suggests that it's closer to a no-win deal, resulting in less privacy and precious little added security... |
Mother Jones Nov/Dec 2001 Julie Wakefield |
A Face in the Crowd Is surveillance software turning police into Robocops? |
AskMen.com July 6, 2015 Stephanie Soh |
MasterCard Wants You To Shop Online With Your Selfie Trending news: forget fingerprints, selfies are the new way to pay online. |
CIO May 15, 2003 Scott Berinato |
What's In a Face? Part of the reason biometrics remains a niche field is because the still-improving technology has been oversold. |
Fast Company Neal Ungerleider |
Why Facebook's New Photo App Won't Be Available In Europe Facebook's latest standalone app Moments won't be making its way to Europe due to privacy concerns. |
National Defense April 2010 Stew Magnuson |
Face, Iris and Fingerprint Biometrics Good Enough for Now, Says White House Staffer Federal agencies that collect biometric data to screen individuals should concentrate their efforts on fingerprints, faces and irises, and perfect the collection of those technologies first. |
CIO May 15, 2003 Juan Carlos Perez |
Reality Unlike TV Biometrics -- the use of IT to identify people using fingerprints, voice, face and hand geometry -- has its limitations. The applications aren't 100 percent accurate, for starters. And technology standards and concerns about privacy also are potential limitations. But it is improving. |
Mother Jones Jan/Feb 2002 Brendan I. Koerner |
Up Close and Personal High-tech identification devices could produce reams of data on law-abiding citizens -- but may be useless in fighting terrorists... |
PC Magazine January 20, 2004 Brett Glass |
Biometric Security Someday biometric systems may play an important role in securing all kinds of systems, but they're not foolproof yet. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2005 Ben Ames |
Navy looks to Identix to push research in facial recognition Company researchers seek to further the state-of-the-art in facial- and image-recognition technologies for human identification, justify new facial-recognition applications for antiterrorism, and develop a human-identity system for the U.S. military. |
U.S. Banker January 2004 Karen Krebsbach |
Biometrics Takes Hold Overseas, But Not in U.S. U.S. banks, tied to legacy systems, are reluctant to start over with what many consider untested technology. Then there's the real bugaboo: privacy. |
InternetNews February 20, 2009 Sean Michael Kerner |
Facial Recognition Gets a Black Eye at Black Hat Researcher demonstrates how easy it is to defeat biometric security on major vendors' notebooks. |
CFO October 15, 2002 Russ Banham |
The Eyes Have It Concerned about security, companies may soon rely on a wide range of biometrics. Turns out you're even more special than you thought. |
National Defense October 2012 Eric Beidel |
Smile: Software Captures Faces in Bad Surveillance Imagery New Hampshire-based Animetrics has developed technology to create clear 3-D facial renderings from low-quality photos and videos. |
National Defense January 2009 Kimberly Johnson |
Navy Seeks to Miniaturize Biometric Gear The Navy plans to issue biometric-capable handheld computers that can help sailors quickly identify a terrorist suspect when they are searching enemy ships. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2011 Willie D. Jones |
The Future of Riots Video surveillance of London's rioters points to future of facial recognition |
National Defense December 2010 Stew Magnuson |
Underlying Science Behind Biometrics Requires More Rigor, Report Says The biometrics industry has seen rapid growth in the post-9/11 world with numerous companies touting products that they say can confirm a subject's identity based on his physical or behavioral characteristics with reasonable accuracy. |
Information Today December 2001 Shirl Kennedy |
Security Technology and Other Issues Biometric Technology... Steganography... Computer Forensics... Cyberterrorism... Working from Home... |
CIO November 1, 2003 Scott Berinato |
Face Recognition Hype Is Over Since 9/11, few counterterrorism technologies have been hyped more than face recognition. Recently, though, reality interrupted the hype when two public pilot projects of the technology ended in failure. |
Bank Technology News March 2010 Rebecca Sausner |
1. Union Savings Breaks Security Barriers, Arrests Fraud There aren't too many one-of-a-kind, leading edge community bank IT projects, but Union Savings Bank's integration of its video surveillance system with biometric recognition and search software and its Fiserv teller platform surely makes that list. |