Since WIRED reported on Meta’s NameTag face recognition system, company executives have made confusing and conflicting ...
AI agent security now has a purpose-built open-source guardrail: Ant Group released SingGuard-NSFA, a free framework that catches prompt injection and credential-theft patterns before AI agents ...
Georgia election officials passed new rules for vote counting and public access despite warnings of legal overreach.
The EV company’s latest iOS app update includes code strings hinting at a future ID check for using its driver-assistance ...
What if your front door could recognize faces, show who's outside, let you talk to visitors, and unlock in six ways—all from ...
ICE Task Force app lets deputized officers scan anyone's face during a traffic stop, matching images against 250 million federal records stored 15 years.
A document from the Department of Homeland Security outlines plans to issue local police facial recognition technology used by federal immigration agents, a move that will expand the scope of ICE ...
Google DeepMind’s AI Control Roadmap outlines monitoring, access controls, and blocking mechanisms for securing advanced AI agents inside enterprise infrastructure.
Meta’s development of facial recognition for its smart glasses is drawing sharper scrutiny after reporting that the company licensed technology from ROC, a biometric software firm with extensive ...
An investigative report reveals that Meta licensed face recognition from Rank One, a Pentagon contractor, and built a system called NameTag into an app on 50 million phones before deleting it.
The Meta face recognition system for its smart glasses was built on software licensed from Rank One Computing, a Pentagon and police contractor, according to a WIRED investigation. Reporters Dell ...