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  2. Facial recognition system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facial_recognition_system

    The FBI uses the photos as an investigative tool, not for positive identification. [93] As of 2016, facial recognition was being used to identify people in photos taken by police in San Diego and Los Angeles (not on real-time video, and only against booking photos) [94] and use was planned in West Virginia and Dallas. [95]

  3. Zabasearch.com - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zabasearch.com

    Zabasearch.com is a website that searches for and collates disparate information regarding United States residents, including names, current and past addresses, phone numbers, and birth years, and then permits the user to query other search engines with this information to retrieve additional data, such as satellite photos of addresses and criminal background checks.

  4. Amazon Rekognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Rekognition

    Celebrity recognition in images [3] [4]; Facial attribute detection in images, including gender, age range, emotions (e.g. happy, calm, disgusted), whether the face has a beard or mustache, whether the face has eyeglasses or sunglasses, whether the eyes are open, whether the mouth is open, whether the person is smiling, and the location of several markers such as the pupils and jaw line.

  5. Data re-identification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_re-identification

    In the resulting research paper, there were startling revelations of how easy it is to re-identify Netflix users. For example, simply knowing data about only two movies a user has reviewed, including the precise rating and the date of rating give or take three days allows for 68% re-identification success. [9]

  6. Spokeo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spokeo

    Spokeo utilizes deep web crawlers to aggregate data. [9] Searches can be made for a name, email, phone number, username or address. The site allows users to remove information about themselves through an "opt-out" process that requires the URL of the listing and a valid email address. [10]

  7. De-identification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De-identification

    Common strategies include deleting or masking personal identifiers, such as personal name, and suppressing or generalizing quasi-identifiers, such as date of birth. The reverse process of using de-identified data to identify individuals is known as data re-identification.

  8. Exclusive: Leaked Amazon documents identify critical flaws in ...

    www.aol.com/finance/exclusive-leaked-amazon...

    Nearly 10% of people who are active users of the voice assistant through Amazon Echo devices—or 3.8 million people in total—won’t be able to access the new version through those devices.

  9. PhotoDNA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PhotoDNA

    Microsoft originally used PhotoDNA on its own services including Bing and OneDrive. [31] As of 2022, PhotoDNA was widely used by online service providers for their content moderation efforts [10] [32] [33] including Google's Gmail, Twitter, [34] Facebook, [35] Adobe Systems, [36] Reddit, [37] and Discord.