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The world is headed towards a technological system that has the means of identifying individuals at any time and in any place using artificial intelligence. Such a system allows the complete control of all of mankind by a handful of powerful leaders.
 
October 25 - New AI Can Search For People By Height, Gender And Clothing

Article: Miscellaneous

A team of AI researchers from India developed a tool to search for people in surveillance footage by height, clothing color, and gender. It’s like a search engine that can find people in a video. The scientists used deep learning (and Microsoft’s COCO dataset) to train a convolutional neural network (CNN) how to recognize certain human features, called soft biometrics, using computer vision.

 

Basically, you can tell this AI some details about the person you’re looking for and it’ll scour whatever video you give it. For example, a request for “females wearing red shirts who are 153 cm tall” would, potentially, narrow down an entire video clip to just frames featuring people who meet that criteria. According to researchers, the algorithm “correctly recovers 28 persons out of 41 in a very challenging dataset with soft biometric attributes.” Currently it only searches by height, torso (clothing) color, and gender.
 

At first glance the idea of identifying people in videos who meet relatively vague descriptions, and with accuracy that’s a little better than half, doesn’t sound like an important technological advance. But this early work shows plenty of potential. Its worth asking what it would mean if accuracy could be improved beyond human capabilities.

 

There are scenarios where interested parties won’t know what they’re looking for in surveillance data in real time. This experimental CNN would be perfectly suited for use cases where we need to put together a timeline surrounding a specific individual, based on available historic surveillance footage.

 

Instead of requiring a human or an AI-construct to provide constant real-time observation, this paradigm would involve using computers to scour archival footage for only the data is that is at least somewhat relevant. It’s a minor distinction, but one that could spell the difference between government voyeurism and citizen protection. The researchers hope further development will lead to a more robust and accurate search tool


 


 

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