- One of the most common facial recognition programs is Face++ which is used to manage entry everywhere from Beijing's train stations to Alibaba's office building.
- Alibaba has also developed its own systems that will soon be used in Shanghai's metro to identify commuters via their face and voice
- Facial recognition cameras are installed at intersections to take pictures of people crossing roads or offending traffic rules.
- Railway police already use facial recognition sunglasses that can identify travelers within 100 milliseconds. Since their introduction earlier this year, they've been used to identify a number of criminals.
- A number of provinces photograph jaywalkers and, after its matched to a police database, post the photo, ID number and home address on public screens. Offenders can spend 20 minutes helping a traffic officer or pay a $3 fine to have the image removed.
- College entrance exams across the country use facial and fingerprint recognition to ensure test takers are the real students.
- After a spate of kidnappings, some childcare centers only unlock doors to faces registered in its system. One kindergarten has more than 200 security cameras as well as a police station on campus.
- Even toilet paper dispensers use the technology, limiting each person to 2 feet of paper every nine minutes. Apparently a number of patrons kept stealing from public bathrooms.
- KFC store uses "Smile to Pay" technology.
- Customers can also use facial recognition to pay for purchases at unmanned convenience stores
- Alibaba has a chain of cashless stores called Hema. Shoppers use their face and phone number to approve payments from their Alipay account.
- Customers of China Merchants Bank scan their faces instead of their bank cards at some 1,000 ATMs.
- Xiaozhu, the Airbnb of China, has smart locks that open after scanning renters' faces
- A car vending machine by Alibaba's Tmall even uses state-of-the-art recognition technology.
- Insurance firm Taikang verifies the identities of customers by their face
- Police in Chongqing use surveillance software and in the first 40 days, it identified 69 criminals
- SenseTime's software tracks customers as they move around a department store.
- Xinjiang has more than 40,000 surveillance cameras used to track and monitor the Uyghur ethnic minority.
- To enter the Hotan bazaar in Xinjiang, shoppers must have their face scanned and cross-referenced to their national identification card.
- Even petrol stations in Xinjiang require drivers be identified by facial recognition cameras before filling up.
- In other areas of China, police use hand-held systems to recognize faces.
- Police in Kashgar now have smartphones that scan faces and match with IDs
- China’s Police have an SUV with a 360-degree camera that can scan every face within 200 feet while driving up to 75mph. The driver is alerted to any database match.
Monday, April 16, 2018
Facial recognition to track citizens. A MUST read!
AI device for diabetic eye problems approved by FDA
IDx-DR can diagnose diabetic retinopathy, the most common cause of vision loss among the more than 30 million Americans living with diabetes
Photos are taken by a retinal camera of the patient’s retina are uploaded to IDx-DR and an algorithm analyzes the images to determine whether the patient has the disease , where too much blood sugar damages the blood vessels in the back of the eye.
In one clinical trial that used more than 900 images, IDx-DR correctly detected retinopathy about 87 percent of the time, and could correctly identify those who didn’t have the disease about 90 percent of the time.
The software is unique because it’s autonomous and there’s “not a specialist looking over the shoulder of [this] algorithm,”
IDx-DR founder Michael Abrà moff told Science News. “It makes the clinical decision on its own.” This means that the technology can be used by a nurse or doctor who’s not an eye specialist, making diagnosis more accessible.
The benefit..... over 30 million patients wouldn’t need to wait for an eye specialist to be available to get a diagnosis...
There will always be a need for a specialist to check and be responsible when the diagnosis is wrong - but that specialist can be a technician that can check lots - creating other jobs
Now that the FDA has cleared IDx-DR, it might lead the way to a new slew of autonomous diagnostic tests and the trade-offs they bring. Such as Googles DeepMind which is using AI to spot eye disease.
Thursday, April 12, 2018
Cities launching their own Cryptos
Solve this and win a Nobel Prize
How do the trillions of cells that make up your body stay in touch? Apparently The same way we used to:
sending notes through the post.
Learning how to read and write “letters” and post them through our intra-body postal system running through our blood, could give us early warning about cancer and Alzheimer’s and potentially finding a cure!!
What we need to do is to work out how to read the mail, says University of Sydney associate professor Wojciech Chrzanowski, and understand our bodies at a cellular level.
This is how the Prof says it works :-
All the cells in our body are constantly producing tiny bubbles which the body (or something) fills with a cocktail of DNA and other molecules and are sent into the bloodstream.
These cells are called extracellular vesicles
These Cells have special receptors to read the data in the bubbles. The data lets cells send messages to each other.
Those messages can tell our body what to do.
Professor Chrzanowski is particularly interested in the Stem cells that heal damaged tissue – without physically touching the damage.
He theorises they are sending out tiny bubbles filled with DNA. When the damaged cell receives the bubble, it follows the DNA instructions and heals itself.
Professor Chrzanowski and teams at the CSIRO are trying to decipher and potentially write or code those messages.
Imagining being able to inject these regenerating cells into patients with cancer or autoimmune conditions.
It’s like force-feeding the body a message that says: heal thyself.
Want to win a Nobel prize?
All we need to do is work out how to read the mail.
“You could envisage this cellular system as a post office system – a letter is sent from one cell to another. And the letters contain programs for the cells to run,” says University of Sydney associate professor Wojciech Chrzanowski.
We still don’t quite know how the system works – “If we can figure that out, we’ll probably win a Nobel, to be honest,” says Professor Chrzanowski – but here’s how the leading theory goes
HOw we are trying to solve the puzzle
This is how Professor Chrzanowski and doctoral candidate Sally Yunsun Kimthey have been learning to read these letters .....
The pair warmed a group of extracellular vesicles with a laser, and then measured their vibrations using a tiny needle about 100,000 times thinner than a human hair.
Hot molecules vibrate at different rates depending on what they are made of. By measuring the vibration, the team could tell exactly what was in each bubble.
It was like reading someone else’s mail without ever opening it.
“This is going to be a pretty important development,” says Professor Andrew Hill, president of the International Society for Extracellular Vesicles.
Wednesday, April 11, 2018
Zuckerberg goes head to head with Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and says he agrees with regulation - but the right regulation!
He says “my people will speak to your people !
Graham cut to the chase and asked if Zuckerberg thought Facebook was a monopoly.
“It certainly doesn’t feel like that to me,” Zuckerberg replied, as laughter rippled through the room.
https://www.theverge.com/2018/4/10/17220934/facebook-monopoly-competitor-mark-zuckerberg-senate-hearing-lindsey-graham?utm_campaign=theverge&utm_content=entry&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter via @Verge
Bitcoin banned in India
MUMBAI: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Thursday barred banks and financial institutions from dealing with virtual currencies including Bitcoins and said that it was time and again warning users of virtual currencies regarding the risks associated with it.
What do you think ?
Monday, April 9, 2018
The Future Of Work - Skills for the 21st Century
The right Skills will be needed in the new economy - and globalisation and technological change (the so-called “New Machine Age/4th Industrial Revolution”) is making skills that we used to have redundant - FAST!!
We will need to have the necessary skills needed to cope with this massive change....
How will we be able to upskill ourselves when the necessary skills required are changing so fast?
An OECD survey identified some of the issues that need to be addressed:-
- The Transition from School to Work
- Return to Skills
- Skill Mismatch
- Skill Use at the Workplace
- Changing Comparative Advantage and Global Value Chains (GVCs)
- The Fourth Industrial Revolution - major impact on the demands and the supply of skills
- Lifelong Learning - this is key
- Ageing-skills-productivity-wages
- Inequality
- Wellbeing - Life Balance
A detailed white paper can be found here https://read.oecd-ilibrary.org/education/skills-for-the-21st-century_96e69229-en#page10
My big take on this, is that for you to survive and thrive in the modern economy, you need to learn how to learn!
We were priviliged to host a brilliant mastermind lunch with world leading innovators and disruptors Heather McGowan and Chris Shipley
What do you want to be when you grow up?
- 65% of jobs on the market don’t exist yet
- 47% of current jobs will be automated
- Only 27% of students will work in their major
- And most jobs will only exist in 5 industries!
In the past, you would do a degree, learn your trade, and ou were qualified. That does not cut it any more. Because things are changing so fast, what you learnt a few years ago will be redundant, and if you do not learnt “new way” of doing things, you will be left behind.
The reality of change is the norm, and is you are to keep up with the times, you will need to break through your comfort zone of what you know, because what you know will become redundant
Lifelong learning is key
Is it relevant for you to learn them now (as in a few years time , they will be different anyway)
In 10 years time, jobs that exist today will be redundant, but there will be more jobs that will be needed , which will be augmented by AI.
What are the 5 things you need to know to survive and thrive in the new economy?
- Get comfortable being uncomfortable
- Know your why (your purpose)
- Learning agility is the bomb
- Unbundle work and talent
- Reorganisation required reorientation
This is an exciting time for people who are open to change, and are willing to learn how to learn .
We were really priviliged to host a brilliant session by world leading experts, Chris Shipley and Heather McGowan
Spark published a brilliant article on the future of jobs
https://issuu.com/bsicomms/docs/spark_mag_jan_final.compressed/c/s4zw7ca
So what do you the skills are that you think will be in demand in 2050?