Worried About Privacy for Your Selfies? These Tools Can Help Spoof Facial Recognition AI
Fawkes and LowKey are two tools that leverage adversarial attacks to spoof AI, preventing detection by facial recognition software. By Edited by Gadgets 360 Newsdesk | Updated: 10 May 2021 19:27 IST
Photo Credit: University of Chicago/ SAND Lab
Fawkes introduces pixel-level alterations to images, thwarting recognition by AI
Highlights
Such software can be duped by using adversarial attacks
Two methods to spoof such AI were detailed at a conference recently
Ever wondered what happens to a selfie you upload on a social media site? Activists and researchers have long warned about data privacy and said that photographs uploaded on the Internet may be used to train artificial intelligence (AI) powered facial recognition tools. These AI-enabled tools (such as Clearview, AWS Rekognition, Microsoft Azure, and Face++) could in turn be used by governments or other
Gen Z was hit with three major events. 8:00 am, Mar. 10, 2021 ×
Eight local youths known as Zoomers, or Gen Z, give their thoughts on their future. They are, clockwise from top, middle: Luke Drake, Alexus Heins, Makayla Kennedy, Daniel Ma, Erin Stoeckig, Adam McPhail, Alissa Halvorson, and Ava Jovaag. (Post Bulletin photo illustration)
ROCHESTER, Minn. People don t typically view themselves as being shaped by events unless they have been hit by a two-by-four.
And today s youth have been gobsmacked by three epic events: a once-in-a-century pandemic, a recession and, in the midst of both, a global reckoning on racism sparked by the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.
How the pandemic will shape today s youth | Grand Forks Herald grandforksherald.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from grandforksherald.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Gen Z was hit with three major events. 7:00 am, Mar. 6, 2021 ×
Eight local youths known as Zoomers, or Gen Z, give their thoughts on their future. They are, clockwise from top, middle: Luke Drake, Alexus Heins, Makayla Kennedy, Daniel Ma, Erin Stoeckig, Adam McPhail, Alissa Halvorson, and Ava Jovaag. (Post Bulletin photo illustration)
ROCHESTER, Minn. People don t typically view themselves as being shaped by events unless they have been hit by a two-by-four.
And today s youth have been gobsmacked by three epic events: a once-in-a-century pandemic, a recession and, in the midst of both, a global reckoning on racism sparked by the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis.