View allAll Photos Tagged FacialRecognition

This is so much fun, although I don't see the resemblence my self.

 

Worth a try,

 

www.myheritage.com/FP/Company/tryFaceRecognition.php?s=1&...

"Devorah Sperber uses hundreds, sometimes thousands, of thread spools as her medium and bases her works on the most recognizable images from the past, icons of art such as Grant Wood’s American Gothic and Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa"

www.arkellmuseum.org/pdfs/press_thenow.pdf

It hangs upside down and you view it through an optical device. (read below)

Description: a life-sized rendering of Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa. The work is constructed from only 425 spools of thread resulting in extremely low image resolution. Yet when seen with an optical device, the thread spools condense into a blurred yet recognizable image, conveying how little information the brain needs to make sense of visual imagery.

 

This concept was explored by self-described "Cyberneticist," Leon Harmon of Bell Labs in 1973. His early pixilated image was included in an article for Scientific American in November 1973, titled "The Recognition of Faces" as a demonstration of the minimum conditions needed to recognize a face.

www.devorahsperber.com/thread_works_index_html_and_2x2s/m...

www.devorahsperber.com/

We deployed our Live Facial Recognition (LFR) technology for the first time this week.

 

The two vans were in Sale town centre on Tuesday where officers were on hand to talk to and engage with members of the public.

 

No arrests were made and the vans will return to Sale on Thursday for a further deployment.

 

Inspector Jon Middleton, who oversaw the Sale operation, said: “We deploy the LFR vans in areas where there is a policing reason – for example shoplifting or neighbourhood crime.

 

“It is important we are out and about speaking to people and engaging with the public, and that is exactly what we have been doing in Sale.

 

“People have generally been happy to see us and speak to us, and supportive of the way the technology is being used.

 

“We will gradually build up the number and frequency of the deployments, and in the coming weeks will be in Bolton, Wigan and Manchester city centre.”

  

We are using LFR technology to ensure the continued safety of our communities in Greater Manchester.

 

The Home Office has supplied GMP with two LFR vans for use in areas where an operational need has been identified – not exclusively but areas with crime issues and large footfall, as well as music and sporting events.

 

The cameras will focus on a specific area or crowd and detect faces compared to a pre-prepared watchlist with an alert issued immediately if there is a match.

 

We will list future deployments on our website.

 

You should call 101, the national non-emergency number, to report crime and other concerns that do not require an emergency response.

 

Always call 999 in an emergency, such as when a crime is in progress, violence is being used or threatened or where there is danger to life.

 

You can also call anonymously with information about crime to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Crimestoppers is an independent charity who will not want your name, just your information. Your call will not be traced or recorded and you do not have to go to court or give a statement.

 

You can access many of our services online at www.gmp.police.uk

 

We deployed our Live Facial Recognition (LFR) technology for the first time this week.

 

The two vans were in Sale town centre on Tuesday where officers were on hand to talk to and engage with members of the public.

 

No arrests were made and the vans will return to Sale on Thursday for a further deployment.

 

Inspector Jon Middleton, who oversaw the Sale operation, said: “We deploy the LFR vans in areas where there is a policing reason – for example shoplifting or neighbourhood crime.

 

“It is important we are out and about speaking to people and engaging with the public, and that is exactly what we have been doing in Sale.

 

“People have generally been happy to see us and speak to us, and supportive of the way the technology is being used.

 

“We will gradually build up the number and frequency of the deployments, and in the coming weeks will be in Bolton, Wigan and Manchester city centre.”

  

We are using LFR technology to ensure the continued safety of our communities in Greater Manchester.

 

The Home Office has supplied GMP with two LFR vans for use in areas where an operational need has been identified – not exclusively but areas with crime issues and large footfall, as well as music and sporting events.

 

The cameras will focus on a specific area or crowd and detect faces compared to a pre-prepared watchlist with an alert issued immediately if there is a match.

 

We will list future deployments on our website.

 

You should call 101, the national non-emergency number, to report crime and other concerns that do not require an emergency response.

 

Always call 999 in an emergency, such as when a crime is in progress, violence is being used or threatened or where there is danger to life.

 

You can also call anonymously with information about crime to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Crimestoppers is an independent charity who will not want your name, just your information. Your call will not be traced or recorded and you do not have to go to court or give a statement.

 

You can access many of our services online at www.gmp.police.uk

 

Trying out the new Google Images search-with-an-image feature. I pulled out a random John Edwards thumbnail from the ProPublica homepage. He apparently shares many facial characteristics with Asian women.

Mirrors (60% match) to this photo taken earlier.

We always knew andyd was lovely, some very good looking celebrity look alikes

Mirrors (60% match) this photo taken earlier. Photo #1

We deployed our Live Facial Recognition (LFR) technology for the first time this week.

 

The two vans were in Sale town centre on Tuesday where officers were on hand to talk to and engage with members of the public.

 

No arrests were made and the vans will return to Sale on Thursday for a further deployment.

 

Inspector Jon Middleton, who oversaw the Sale operation, said: “We deploy the LFR vans in areas where there is a policing reason – for example shoplifting or neighbourhood crime.

 

“It is important we are out and about speaking to people and engaging with the public, and that is exactly what we have been doing in Sale.

 

“People have generally been happy to see us and speak to us, and supportive of the way the technology is being used.

 

“We will gradually build up the number and frequency of the deployments, and in the coming weeks will be in Bolton, Wigan and Manchester city centre.”

  

We are using LFR technology to ensure the continued safety of our communities in Greater Manchester.

 

The Home Office has supplied GMP with two LFR vans for use in areas where an operational need has been identified – not exclusively but areas with crime issues and large footfall, as well as music and sporting events.

 

The cameras will focus on a specific area or crowd and detect faces compared to a pre-prepared watchlist with an alert issued immediately if there is a match.

 

We will list future deployments on our website.

 

You should call 101, the national non-emergency number, to report crime and other concerns that do not require an emergency response.

 

Always call 999 in an emergency, such as when a crime is in progress, violence is being used or threatened or where there is danger to life.

 

You can also call anonymously with information about crime to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111. Crimestoppers is an independent charity who will not want your name, just your information. Your call will not be traced or recorded and you do not have to go to court or give a statement.

 

You can access many of our services online at www.gmp.police.uk

 

Juan Perón was an Argentine military officer and politician three times elected as president but only served one full term. Juan was part of the 1943 military coup and served his first term as president from 1946-1952. His state goals were social justice and economic independence for Argentina. Despite serious economic troubles such as stagflation, Juan's government is remembered for its significant infrastructure and social investments.

 

He and his second wife, Eva, met in early 1944 during a charity event in Buenos Aires while Juan was still a Colonel. After their wedding two years later and Juan's election to the presidency, Eva played a prominent role as a labor rights advocate and philanthropist. She ran the Ministries of Labor and Health and established the Eva Perón Foundation in 1948, which had a $50 million endowment (nearly 1% of Argentina's GDP at the time). She exerted significant influence over and provided great popular support for her husband's policies.

 

Juan and Eva remained strongly devoted to helping the working and lower classes of Argentina. Eva died of cancer in 1952. At the news of the nation's spiritual leader's death all activity in Argentina stopped, the government suspended all activity for two days, and popular grief was unprecedented; eight people died and over 2000 injured in crushing mobs trying to get near her body as it was being moved. Juan was overthrown in a 1955 military coup and was exiled to Venezuela, then moved to Spain. He returned to Argentina in 1973 and died in 1974.

Seen while vending Black Lives Matter jewelry @ Washington Square Park. There is a vigil for Daunte Wright at Washington Square Park and there was a #BanTheScan rally to Outlaw Facial Recognition In NYC @ Washington Square Park yesterday.

Mirrors <a href=http://www.flickr.com/photos/65268161@N00/1368587225 (59% match) taken earlier.

 

photo 7

During George Burns's early career he often partnered with a young woman onstage. He never clicked with any of them until he met Gracie Allen in 1923. “And all of a sudden,” he reminisced many years later, “the audience realized I had a talent. They were right. I did have a talent—and I was married to her for 38 years.”

 

While touring together, George found himself falling in love with Gracie. It took him three years to woo her, and finally won her over by accidentally making her cry; Gracie figured that if George meant enough to her to make her cry, she must be in love with him.

 

The comedic couple performed together on radio, television, film and onstage for over twenty-five years. Gracie retired in 1958 due to health reasons and died of heart disease in 1964.

 

George absorbed himself in his career after her death, working on hit television series and movies. He visited Gracie's grave once a month until he died in 1996 aged 100. He was interred next to her, their tombstone reading, “Gracie Allen and George Burns—Together Again.”

 

Mirrors (23% match) this photo taken earlier.

 

photo 12

Zelda & Fitzgerald met in Montgomery, Alabama. Initially, Fitzgerald was unable to convince Zelda that he could provide her with the type of lifestyle she demanded and she broke off their engagement. Fitzgerald moved back in with his parents to revise his book, "The Romantic Egoist." And in the fall of 1919, after Scribners picked up the newly completed, "The Side of Paradise", their engagement was back on.

 

Fitzgerald passed away at the age of 44 in 1940. Zelda struggled with schizophrenia during the early 1930's and was very fragile throughout the rest of her life. Their tempestuous relationship has been the basis for many works.

 

"Nobody has ever measured, even poets, how much a heart can hold." ~Zelda Fitzgerald

A collaboration with Martelle Hunt based on the idea of CV Dazzle cvdazzle.com/ by Adam Harvey, exploring how fashion can be used as camouflage from facial recognition software.

 

HMU: Martelle Hunt

MODEL: Janet Huang

 

Assisted by Dustin Sarten

Day 48 of 365

 

A collaboration with Martelle Hunt based on the idea of CV Dazzle by Adam Harvey, exploring how fashion can be used as camouflage from facial recognition software.

 

HMU: Martelle Hunt

MODELS: Joshua Lowe, Martelle Hunt, Janet Huang

 

Assisted by Dustin Sarten

A collaboration with Martelle Hunt based on the idea of CV Dazzle cvdazzle.com/ by Adam Harvey, exploring how fashion can be used as camouflage from facial recognition software.

 

HMU: Martelle Hunt

MODEL: Joshua Lowe

 

Assisted by Dustin Sarten

Mirrors (59% match) this photo taken earlier.

 

photo 10

Mirrors (60% match) this photo taken earlier.

photo #1

Mirrors <a href=http://www.flickr.com/photos/65268161@N00/1369348628 (60% match) taken earlier.

 

photo 3

A collaboration with Martelle Hunt based on the idea of CV Dazzle cvdazzle.com/ by Adam Harvey, exploring how fashion can be used as camouflage from facial recognition software.

HMU: Martelle Hunt

MODEL: Martelle Hunt

 

Assisted by Dustin Sarten

Mirrors <a href=http://www.flickr.com/photos/65268161@N00/1369348628 (60% match) taken earlier.

 

photo 3

Mirrors (60% match) this photo taken earlier.

 

photo 1

Olgivanna and Frank Lloyd Wright met at the Petrograd Ballet performing in Chicago in 1924. Frank was a famous American architect, nearly at the height of his creative powers, and Olgivanna was a Montenegrin dancer. She had great influence on his work and acted as a matriarch of his estate after he died.

 

Soon after they met, Frank and Olgivanna moved to Frank's home in Wisconsin, called Taliesin. Olgivanna gave birth to their daughter, Lovanna just a few months later. Together they founded a architectural fellowship at Taliesin, and after Frank finalized the divorce to his first wife he and Olgivanna married in 1928. The years he spent in Arizona with Olgivanna were his most productive, where he designed more than half of his buildings and authored his autobiography.

 

After Frank's death in 1959 Olgivanna continued to run the estate and fellowship. Although Frank's body had been buried in Wisconsin for over 25 years, Olgivanna had arranged that it be unburied, cremated, and mixed with her own ashes to build a wall in a memorial garden. Although her wishes were not fully carried out to letter, Frank's remains today lie next to Olgivanna's in Arizona.

Mirrors <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/65268161@N00/1369547024" (59% match) taken earlier.

 

photo 9

welcome to the new world order. they will enter your home.

 

NYS Contact Tracing

When you get a call from NYS Contact Tracing — Answer your phone!

 

Our Contact Tracing force is working every day to help stop the spread.

 

Note: Any information you give a contact tracer will be strictly confidential and treated as a private medical record. A NYS contact tracer will NEVER ask for your Social Security Number or private financial information (like your credit card number) — if someone purporting to be a contact tracer asks for that information, hang up.

Big Bang Data

An exhibition on Big Data and Art, selfies and surveillance at Somerset House, London

03 December 2015 to 20 March 2016

 

Blas, Zach (2013-2015)

 

Face Cages #1, #2 and #3

 

uk.complex.com/style/2014/07/artist-zach-blas-face-cage-h...

 

@SomersetHouse

somersethouse.org.uk/bigbangdata

#BigBangData

Facebook: somersethouse

Instagram: somersethouselondon

YouTube: somersethouselondon

MFlow cameras at Gatwick Airport by 'Human Recognition Systems'. A pretty dismal piece of design.

No, but it is a magician, so points for that at least.

NYC: City Hall Park / Image Object

 

Amanda Ross-Ho's "The Character and Shape of Illuminated Things (Facial Recognition)"

 

(One of seven artists' works in Image Object)

 

Leica M-P (Typ 240) | Leica Elmar-M 3.8/24 ASPH

From the 2008 Columbus Easy Rider Bike Show. Checkout the faces! I posted this because Apple's Aperture software (v3) started identifying the faces on the bike. lottadot.blogspot.com/2010/02/aperture-facial-recognition...

 

software used by law enforcement in public places can be easily defeated. Example: rt.com/usa/video-surveillance-face-trapwire-237/ At what point will we all be wearing masks? 35mm Leica M6 TTL with 28mm Elmarit-M and HP5+ in Ilfotec DD-X at 68 degrees for 9 minutes.

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