Facebook’s parent company, Meta, is developing plans to incorporate facial recognition technology into the smart glasses it produces with Ray Ban and Oakley. The new feature, dubbed Name Tag, would ...
Emboldened by the success of its smart glasses, Meta is working on a way to release a controversial facial recognition feature to the public.
Biometric locks like face recognition are convenient to set up—but because of a legal loophole, law enforcement can bypass ...
Commentary: A New York Times report reveals that discussions on the widespread use of facial recognition are underway.
Surveillance video taken early Feb. 1 from Nancy Guthrie’s front door shows a holstered, gloved man wearing a ski mask.
Meta is reportedly planning to add facial recognition software to its Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses at some point down the line.
An internal memo reviewed by The New York Times says Meta is considering launching the feature ‘during a dynamic political environment.’ ...
The feature, internally known as “Name Tag,” would allow smart glasses wearers to identify people and get information about them via Meta's AI assistant.
Meta has backed away from highly controversial facial recognition tech in its products and services before, but seemingly not so far that it isn’t willing to have another crack at it. A new report ...
OpenAI’s revenue is rising fast, but so are its costs. Here’s what the company’s economics reveal about the future of AI profitability.
Abstract: The research is devoted to the development of an automated face recognition system based on a convolutional neural network (CNN). The proposed system uses modern methods of image ...
Abstract: Generalized age feature extraction is crucial for age-related facial analysis tasks, such as age estimation and age-invariant face recognition (AIFR). Despite the recent successes of models ...