FACIAL RECOGNITION has quickly shifted from techno-novelty to fact of life for many, with millions around the world at least willing to put up with their faces scanned by software at the airport, their iPhones, or Facebook’s server farms. But researchers at New York University’s AI Now Institute have issued a strong warning against not only ubiquitous facial recognition, but its more sinister cousin: so-called affect recognition, technology that claims it can find hidden meaning in the shape of your nose, the contours of your mouth, and the way you smile. If that sounds like something dredged up from the 19th century, that’s because it sort of is.
Gratis är gott: Shotcut – videoeditor som är helt gratis
Shotcut är en video editor som utvecklas som Open Source vilket gör den både gratis och för flera plattformar. Med tanke på vad videoredigeringsprogram normalt sett brukar kosta så kan det löna sig att sätta sig ned i lugn och…
