same the chance of company bias might be lesser tan the situation in which two voice sound alike or very difficult to an lies and i think they have a tendency to sort of follow the leader and that happens and it s the bias issue is a very serious, you know topic embedded within the 69 ticket working group for the speaker recognition as well. it s a very serious issue. does bias work both ways? by that, i mean, if you go into it not wanting or assume tag you are fought hearing the same voice? it can go either way. as far as familiar voice
i am uma in washington. it could be a long legal battle. and the contractor who admitted the secret service program. and julianne a safrj is in touch with snowden s lawyers and trying to get him in ice lapd. president obama is sounding out on economic, and saying time for excuses is over. and the only excuse for not getting immigration done is coming from the white house. breaking news in the george zimmerman trial. the judge ruled a joyce voice identification. it would have confirmed it was martin calling for help.
me harken back to the casey anthony trial where evidence was brought in of what the trunk of k casey anthony smelled like. they captured the essence of a tube and preserved it for over a year or two and wanted to open the tube for the jurors to smell. it was called smell evidence. there was a fry hearing on that as well. is that sort of equate? absolutely. that s an even better example. any time you have a novel area, the smell evidence, although we are all familiar with smells, reducing smells to a science is something totally different. that s exactly what came up in casey anthony. whether it was an accepted area of science. not whether or not you re an expert on smells. we all arguably are an expert on smells. but whether smell science is a legitimate science. it s a similar motion. it s important to note the prosecution in zimmerman said this is about voice
identification and this has been an accepted science. but the defense is saying, no, not quite. this expert is talking about and you have to read this report of their proposed expert. the sounds that he heard and the voices he heard sounded like a religious statement. it sounded like he was making some kind of religious reference. that is not the language of voice identification. that s the language of reading tea leaves. that s like a psychic reading into what george zimmerman may or may not have been doing. it looks like they are wrapping right now. sorry to interrupt you. as you re talking, i wanted to make sure viewers wanted to know this is a live picture of the courtroom. i expected motion goss to go most of the day. i m surprised they rifled through them. you can see mark o mara greeting some of the members in the court. george zimmerman, though, wasn t there today. standby.
cameras that randomly scan people s faces. we have the details. looks like we got a hit. u.s. marshals. reporter: you ve seen it on tv facial recognition match on the father. reporter: and in the movies for years. now it may soon be coming to a city near you. the fbi s billion-dollar project will use available surveillance cameras to scan faces and match those images against their national database of known criminals. dubbed the next generation identification program, face recognition, dna, iris scans and voice identification will make it harder for the most wanted to hide. some worry about the potential to invade privacy. others believe it s a crime-fighting tool whose time has come. you ve got to go after them where they are, go after them smart, intelligence and special operations units. reporter: and as we approach the anniversary of september 11th a new bulletin obtained by