So lets think about some real world use cases. So, i am in the Counter Terrorism business and i know that there are five individuals in central london, where were sitting right now, that want to do harm on a massive scale to the public. Would you have public support to use facial recognition to try to intercept that group of individuals before they could do harm . I would suggest almost categorically that you would. An opposite example now. An individual is being kicked out of the pub for drinking too much on a saturday night. The pub has taken a photo of that individual. Should that individual be prevented from getting into that establishment and other establishments because of that incident . I think you would have very little public consent for that example. Do you support it . And we have more news of a nursery nurse who has been released from jail after serving ten years. That news is breaking now. Hello. Welcome to the programme. Were live until am this morning. What do you think
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In 2017, UK HealthCare neurologist Ima Ebong, M.D., had just begun her clinical neurophysiology fellowship training and had just become a mother for the first time. It had been her happiest and most successful year to date, but everything changed when she was diagnosed with stage 3 colon cancer at just 35 years old. Now cancer-free, Ebong hopes her story will help spread awareness about colorectal cancer, especially to people who are disproportionately impacted by the disease.
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