Apple face-recognition blamed by New York teen for false arrest 6 years ago (bnnbloomberg.ca) 6 comments convivialdingo Reply Add to library ccnafr 6 years ago The article doesn't say, but is the teen black? throwmeback 6 years ago His name (Ousmane Bah) sounds African in origin.This of course means nothing as I'm no clairvoyant, but we know face recognition tends to favour some colours over others. black_teen 6 years ago Why does that matter? adontz 6 years ago Because some real life systems are unintentionally racist, provide more precise results for light skinned people. 2 replies →
ccnafr 6 years ago The article doesn't say, but is the teen black? throwmeback 6 years ago His name (Ousmane Bah) sounds African in origin.This of course means nothing as I'm no clairvoyant, but we know face recognition tends to favour some colours over others. black_teen 6 years ago Why does that matter? adontz 6 years ago Because some real life systems are unintentionally racist, provide more precise results for light skinned people. 2 replies →
throwmeback 6 years ago His name (Ousmane Bah) sounds African in origin.This of course means nothing as I'm no clairvoyant, but we know face recognition tends to favour some colours over others.
black_teen 6 years ago Why does that matter? adontz 6 years ago Because some real life systems are unintentionally racist, provide more precise results for light skinned people. 2 replies →
adontz 6 years ago Because some real life systems are unintentionally racist, provide more precise results for light skinned people. 2 replies →
The article doesn't say, but is the teen black?
His name (Ousmane Bah) sounds African in origin.
This of course means nothing as I'm no clairvoyant, but we know face recognition tends to favour some colours over others.
Why does that matter?
Because some real life systems are unintentionally racist, provide more precise results for light skinned people.
2 replies →