From Spotify to YouTube, platforms now demand biometric proof of age. Experts warn that you could lose access—and your ...
Facial recognition technology works by mapping someone’s unique features and comparing them against a database of stored faces. [iStockphoto] Walk into a shop, board a plane, log into your bank, or ...
New research suggests that an algorithm which scans your face could accurately predict financial, academic, and job success.
Microsoft’s new OneDrive face recognition feature, which uses AI to group photos, is causing controversy because it is enabled by default (opt-out) and comes with a puzzling restriction. Users are ...
The Aurora City Council approved facial recognition technology at its regular Monday night meeting. Supporters believe it clears the way for police officers to use it for solving crimes, and opponents ...
The first six game of the 2025 Charleston Southern football season has not been what head coach Gabe Giardina expected but with half the season remaining, the Buccaneers have a chance to right a lot ...
SYDNEY, Oct 13 (Reuters) - Alphabet-owned Google (GOOGL.O), opens new tab on Monday said it would be "extremely difficult" for Australia to enforce a law prohibiting people younger than 16 from using ...
At the halfway point of the conference season, the top of the Big 12 standings are bunched up with five teams contending for a trip to AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The game will be in early ...
Tinder, the world’s most popular dating platform owned by Dallas-based Match Group, will soon require all new users in the U.S. to verify their identity through a biometric video face scan. The ...
Artificial intelligence is helping health-care providers better assess their patients’ discomfort. For years at Orchard Care Homes, a 23‑facility dementia-care chain in northern England, Cheryl Baird ...
What is it with lawyers and AI? We don’t know, but it feels like an inordinate number of them keep screwing up with AI tools, apparently never learning from their colleagues who get publicly crucified ...
Rep. Jim Himes (D-Conn.) said Sunday it is “probably not” legal for President Trump to repurpose Defense Department funding in order to pay members of the military during the shutdown. “Well, probably ...