Police arrested and charged Robert Dillon with a heinous crime based on nothing more than a faulty image search.
Despite getting his first tattoo at 16, before going on to have various unlicenced body modifications, needles still petrify ...
The key evidence police used to puncture his alibi: facial recognition software matched an image of the suspect to Dillon's ...
A Fort Myers man who was arrested for a crime he couldn’t have committed is now suing multiple Florida law enforcement ...
Preview this article 1 min A Publix shopping center is opening along Candler Road, as part of the ongoing efforts to ...
A man suing Florida police alleges that cops relied on a faulty facial recognition match and concealed exculpatory evidence ...
The ACLU is suing two Florida police departments over the arrest of a Fort Myers man in a child-abduction case, saying ...
World Cup biometrics put your face at the turnstile, and Google's Gemini fills your phone. Here's the AI the 10 million fans will actually touch in 2026.
Meta removed NameTag facial recognition code from its AI app after WIRED found biometric software on 50 million phones that Meta said "does not exist." ...
Dormant face-recognition code reportedly appeared in Meta’s smart glasses app, then disappeared after scrutiny. That has put Meta’s AI eyewear plans back under the privacy spotlight.
Meta secretly shipped facial recognition code in Ray-Ban smart glasses app, then deleted it within 24 hours after WIRED ...
Last week, Wired reported that Meta quietly pushed code for a yet-to-be-released face-recognition system supposedly designed ...