Interesting - how does that come about? Do such students flock to that school?
Same here, I think I just thought about thieves being dressed in black to hide themselves in the night.
What irks me about it is that Amazon doesn't give me access to that data.
Nothing indicates that it is specific to algorithmic facial recognition. Actual humans make mistakes identifying suspects all the time. At the very least, the article should address that and compare the reactions, to…
But then it can't possibly be the "people just believe computers" effect, because the article explicitly states the police realized the computer was wrong.
Then people have to relearn, but it is not the fault of the algorithm. False identifications by humans happen a lot, too. I think it used to be an especially big issue for black people. Like if a black person commits a…
That's not the fault of the face recognition, though. And it would have happened in the same way if a human had misclassified the image. Do they propose nobody should ever look at images of suspects and try to identify…
As if humans have never misidentified people or arrested the wrong person? I find these articles very silly. Maybe the photo on the drivers license was not good enough, so only in the real world could the police see…
How big of a cut do they have to pay on closed hardware consoles?
Interesting - how does that come about? Do such students flock to that school?
Same here, I think I just thought about thieves being dressed in black to hide themselves in the night.
What irks me about it is that Amazon doesn't give me access to that data.
Nothing indicates that it is specific to algorithmic facial recognition. Actual humans make mistakes identifying suspects all the time. At the very least, the article should address that and compare the reactions, to…
But then it can't possibly be the "people just believe computers" effect, because the article explicitly states the police realized the computer was wrong.
Then people have to relearn, but it is not the fault of the algorithm. False identifications by humans happen a lot, too. I think it used to be an especially big issue for black people. Like if a black person commits a…
That's not the fault of the face recognition, though. And it would have happened in the same way if a human had misclassified the image. Do they propose nobody should ever look at images of suspects and try to identify…
As if humans have never misidentified people or arrested the wrong person? I find these articles very silly. Maybe the photo on the drivers license was not good enough, so only in the real world could the police see…
How big of a cut do they have to pay on closed hardware consoles?