Amnesty International researcher Matt Mahmoudi discusses the IDF’s use of the techonology as a tool of mass surveillanceGovernments around the world have increasingly turned to facial recognition systems in recent years to target suspected criminals and crack down on dissent. The recent boom in artificial intelligence has accelerated the technology’s capabilities and proliferation, much to the concern of human rights groups and privacy advocates who see it as a tool with immense potential for...
Ditch the heavy books and opt for a reading tablet instead. We tested the top reading tablets from Kindle, Apple, and more to store all of your must-read titles.
The knifeman behind an attack at Bondi has been identified. Ben Cohen was wrongly accused of being the attacker. He slammed internet sleuths' 'dangerous' accusations. READ MORE:
EBay has launched an artificial intelligence (AI) enhancement that helps fashion consumers “shop the look.” This feature uses consumers’ shopping history to present them with items and outfits that match their style preferences and are available from sellers on the platform, the company said in a Tuesday (April 9) blog post. “We designed shop the look […]
On Sunday, Channel Seven incorrectly labelled uni student Benjamin Cohen as the “lone wolf attacker” behind the Bondi Junction Westfield knife attack which led to six deaths. The 20-year-old has now acquired two top defamation lawyers to sue Seven and seek damages for the error, The Age reports. Patrick George of Giles George has been […]
A person of interest has been identified in connection to a severed human leg found in a Milwaukee County park last week. The Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office said Maxwell Anderson, 33, was arrested last week after authorities searched his home as he is considered a person of interest in the severed leg that was found in Warnimont Park in Cudahy, FOX6 Milwaukee first reported. Police have not explained how Anderson became a person of interest in the case and said he has not been...
Former President Donald Trump's efforts to prepare for his New York hush money trial in a few days have hit a humiliating snag, as his attorneys tried to subpoena former D.A. investigator Jeremy Rosenberg — and accidentally brought in a different person with the same name.The bemused Rosenberg told Trump's legal team "I don't have any files for you," and added, "I'm keeping the fifteen dollars" of witness travel expenses.Commenters on the X social media platform wasted no time burying the former...
It collects all the necessary information from the victim to autonomously access their banking app
Pat Dawson died just over four hours after she was taken by ambulance from her home to the Royal Blackburn Hospital
The melodrama playing out at the tax-vacuum that is National Public Radio is entertaining to behold, but it is also a deeply significant event in the media environment. The very fact that this story continues to evolve and play out beyond the usual 24-hour news cycle is proof that something seismic has taken place. What we are beginning to see is that the reactions and the realities exposed at NPR are proving the revelations made by (former) Executive Editor Uri Berliner are spot-on accurate.
A man who was wrongly named on Channel Seven as the man who killed six people at the Bondi Junction shopping mall on Saturday is suing the network.
Attorney Todd Blanche, representing the ex-president in this case, sent a subpoena to a man they thought was Manhattan investigator Jeremy Rosenberg. Rosenberg used to investigate financial crimes for Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. However, the Trump defense team appears to have sent the subpoena to Brooklyn man Jeremy Rosenberg, a different person