Search Results for ‘face recognition’ — 145 articles
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Surveillance Cameras in the Metropolitan Boston Region
In December 2010, the ACLU of Massachusetts filed a public records request for information about the City of Boston’s surveillance camera network. The request was filed to the Metro Boston Office of Homeland Security, Office of Emergency Management, at the Mayor’s office...
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“See Something, Say Something” — unless it’s omnipresent government surveillance
UPDATE: On July 2, 2012, the MBTA police Twitter account tweeted a copy of the agency's new photography policy. The policy says that people are free to take pictures at MBTA stations, but not of "designated Restricted Areas". It doesn't say that you can't go inside the restricted area to take pictures, simply that you can't take pictures of the restricted area. Does that apply even if the "Restricted Area" is within plain sight? How does that work?
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Biometrics nightmare: coming to a street corner near you
Think you can escape the biometrics matrix because you've never been arrested, or because you are a US citizen? Not so fast.
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FBI special agent: “no credible threats” to NATO summit, Chicago
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Michigan State Police says it has the best biometrics tech in nation, apart from FBI
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According to the Michigan State Police, the agency possesses the most advanced biometrics technology in the nation, apart from the FBI.
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Warning: slow down, technophiles, and look around you
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Biometrics, the military and the police: who is who? Where does that leave us?
The FBI and the Department of Defense are getting close to opening their giant biometrics center, where biometric data about people as diverse as Afghan villagers, Iraqi businessmen, Pakistani farmers, immigrants to the United States, and
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Get out of the pot before it’s too late
License plate readers. Biometric iris scans and face recognition. CCTV cameras that can track you as you move through the city. Video analytics that automatically flag "suspicious activities" and allow police or private spooks to zoom in on your location.
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Video analytics are super creepy
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