Android Authority leak says Google is testing Project Toscana, an advanced face unlock for Pixel and Chromebooks that works in low light and rivals Face ID.
Beyond drones, deep-tech robotics startups drew strong attention. Hyderabad-based xSpecies AI showcased full-stack robotics ...
Google introduced a sophisticated face unlock system with the Pixel 4 several years ago. However, the tech was never seen again, and later Pixel models introduced a more bare-bones version. A report ...
Google has slowly built out face unlock again on Pixels in recent years, with the Pixel 7 series adding face unlock based on the camera, but without the ability to work with secure apps. Google ...
Face unlock on modern Pixel phones is good, but it's not perfect. Google's secret "Project Toscana" will change that.
The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their ...
AURORA, Ill. (WLS) -- Illinois state lawmakers and privacy advocates are raising concerns over technology used by federal agents for immigration enforcement that they say violates the privacy and ...
From Chicago to Minneapolis, federal immigration agents deployed on Trump administration crackdowns have relied on an unlikely tool in the heat of tense operations — cellphone cameras. That practice ...
The grocery store chain Wegmans, among other retailers, is using face recognition on its customers — and scanning their faces for resemblance not only to accused shoplifters but also to people whose ...
OMG! Wegman’s supermarkets are using artificial intelligence and facial recognition? Outrageous! Alert the authorities! Cancel dinner! Never mind the fact that on your way to shop you passed by dozens ...
A data privacy expert spoke with FOX 5 NY's Meredith Gorman about how AI and facial recognition are being used in stores, schools and other public spaces to collect and analyze data. The conversation ...
HARTFORD, Conn. (WFSB) - Grocery stores across Connecticut are using facial recognition technology to combat theft, but some customers and lawmakers are raising privacy concerns about the practice.