One hero included on the list is Ashleigh Linsdell (centre) who spearheaded a national campaign to make scrubs for frontline workers when supplies ran dangerously low.
Despite frequent denials and refusals to respond to public records requests, the LAPD has been using the controversial technology widely since 2009.
Incoming Greens senator Lidia Thorpe says a treaty should take priority over constitutional recognition and wants her party to challenge the Uluru Statement’s order of reforms.
The van-mounted cameras were spotted in the busy area of London popular with tourists, one month after Scotland Yard said they would be deployed across the capital.
Scotland Yard says trials have allowed them to secure a 70% success rate at picking up suspects who walk past cameras – but privacy campaigners say it is a ‘fundamental breach of rights’.
ACLU said Tuesday that ‘giving police departments and consumers access to “watch listing” capabilities on Ring could ‘create lists of undesirables unworthy of entrance into well-to-do areas’.
The software, developed by US company HireVue, analyses the language, tone and facial expressions of candidates as they film themselves answering questions.
Bar staff at Harrild & Sons bar in Farringdon, central London, are using cameras to detect whether customers look old enough to be served alcohol.
Controversial facial recognition systems being trialled by the Met Police is inaccurate 81 per cent of the time, a new independent report found. Four out of five people ‘matched’ were inaccurate.
Rich Reynolds hates Facebook, especially for what it seems to do to people, particularly ufologists in this case. He explains why in this article. With The Mathematical Impossibilities [sic] of Extraterrestrial Visitation Rich lays out his case for probabilities being against the notion of ET excursions to Earth. A reader asks what about all those […]