Windparadox
Gold Member
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While the article does a good job of technically explaining why this kind of programing is flawed, it fails to address the larger issue here. What next? Can AI photo-identification look for other human characteristics such as guilt or innocence? Is a person a criminal? Will the police use it? Consider that such AI programs are in their infancy right now but are all ultimately geared at identifying traits in a person, which the end user finds either profitable and/or beneficial to their own cause.
Civil liberties are at stake here. Living in an online public environment has its risks.
The invention of AI ‘gaydar’ could be the start of something much worse - "
Researchers claim they can spot gay people from a photo, but critics say we’re revisiting pseudoscience"
Researchers claim they can spot gay people from a photo, but critics say we’re revisiting pseudoscience"
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While the article does a good job of technically explaining why this kind of programing is flawed, it fails to address the larger issue here. What next? Can AI photo-identification look for other human characteristics such as guilt or innocence? Is a person a criminal? Will the police use it? Consider that such AI programs are in their infancy right now but are all ultimately geared at identifying traits in a person, which the end user finds either profitable and/or beneficial to their own cause.
Civil liberties are at stake here. Living in an online public environment has its risks.