Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-03-27 21:33:19| Engadget

The New York Times reports that Israels military intelligence has been using an experimental facial recognition program in Gaza thats misidentified Palestinian civilians as having ties to Hamas. Google Photos allegedly plays a part in the chilling programs implementation, although it appears not to be through any direct collaboration with the company. The surveillance program reportedly started as a way to search for Israeli hostages in Gaza. However, as often happens with new wartime technology, the initiative was quickly expanded to root out anyone with ties to Hamas or other militant groups, according to The NYT. The technology is flawed, but Israeli soldiers reportedly havent treated it as such when detaining civilians flagged by the system. According to intelligence officers who spoke to The NYT, the program uses tech from the private Israeli company Corsight. Headquartered in Tel Aviv, it promises its surveillance systems can accurately recognize people with less than half of their faces exposed. It can supposedly be effective even with extreme angles, (even from drones) darkness, and poor quality. But an officer in Israels Unit 8200 learned that, in reality, it often struggled with grainy, obscured or injured faces. According to the official, Corsights tech included false positives and cases where an accurately identified Palestinian was incorrectly flagged as having Hamas ties. Three Israeli officers told The NYT that its military used Google Photos to supplement Corsights tech. Intelligence officials allegedly uploaded data containing known persons of interest to Googles service, allowing them to use the apps photo search feature to flag them among its surveillance materials. One officer said Googles ability to match partially obscured faces was superior to Corsights, but they continued using the latter because it was customizable. When contacted for a statement, a Google spokesperson reiterated to Engadget that the product only groups faces from images youve added to your library. Google Photos is a free product which is widely available to the public that helps you organize photos by grouping similar faces, so you can label people to easily find old photos. It does not provide identities for unknown people in photographs, they wrote. One man erroneously detained through the surveillance program was poet Mosab Abu Toha, who told The NYT he was pulled aside at a military checkpoint in northern Gaza as his family tried to flee to Egypt. He was then allegedly handcuffed and blindfolded, and then beaten and interrogated for two days before finally being returned. He said soldiers told him before his release that his questioning (and then some) had been a mistake. The Things You May Find Hidden in My Ear: Poems From Gaza scribe said he has no connection to Hamas and wasnt aware of an Israeli facial recognition program in Gaza. However, during his detention, he said he overheard someone saying the Israeli army had used a new technology on the group with whom he was incarcerated. Update, March 27, 2024, 4:32 PM ET: This story has been updated to add a statement to Engadget from Google.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/israels-military-reportedly-used-google-photos-to-identify-civilians-in-gaza-200843298.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

27.04Apple has reportedly resumed talks with OpenAI to build a chatbot for the iPhone
26.04The FTC accuses Amazon of using Signals auto-deleting messages to erase evidence
26.04Drake deletes AI-generated Tupac track after Shakurs estate threatened to sue
26.04Aaron Sorkin is working on a Jan. 6-focused follow-up to The Social Network
26.04Samsung's Galaxy S24 Ultra falls to a new low, plus the rest of the week's best tech deals
26.04Nikons Z8 is a phenomenal mirrorless camera for the price
26.04Some of our favorite Bose headphones and earbuds are back to all-time low prices
26.04Apple's 13-inch MacBook Air with the M3 chip has never been cheaper
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

27.04United States: Proposed California Bill Provides Workers The 'Right To Disconnect' From Work - Barnes & Thornburg
27.04China: 중국 국가지식산권국, 2024년 전국 지식재산 홍보주간 활동 실시 - Kangxin
27.04UK: CMA's Potential Competition Concerns For Foundation Models/Generative AI - Bristows
27.04United States: Nonprofits Managing Risk For Youth Programs: Ten Key Compliance Strategies - Venable LLP
27.04UK: Ethics Washing Top Tips To Help Protect Your Charity - Bates Wells
27.04Canada: Navigating Halal Financing For Residential And Commercial Transactions In Canada - Nelligan Law
27.04Canada: Know The Limit, Play Within It: Restrictive Covenants In Canada - Aird & Berlis LLP
27.04Cyprus: Cyprus Bail-In Related Support Scheme: Deadline Approaching - Harneys
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .