Face-Swapping Software To Protect Privacy
(0d0 writes "Some researchers at Columbia University's Computer Vision Labratory have developed software to automatically replace faces in batches of photos. Practical applications include protecting the identities of people in Google's Street View, coupling it with a digital camera's burst mode to create a perfect group photo, or protecting the identities of witnesses or law enforcement and military personnel. Other links to coverage include Boing Boing, American Public Media, and New Scientist."
Beat everyone else to the Laughing Man reference.
If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
Let's call the Automatic Fugly Machine.
Dear god, they mangled those 2 celebrities *bad*. I think Denzel should sue them.
Now we don't have to do it the old fashioned way.
Well, back to rejecting software patent applications.
Anything will help my ugly face! My face will scare Medusa!
I remember a long time ago one of my co-workers was using a dating website in the 1990's and put another person's picture instead of their own picture. It would be interesting to picture of the girl when she arrived for the date!
Unfortunately, I don't have any links saved, but I have seen several instances on Google Street View where faces have been blurred far beyond recognition, as well as license plates.
The group photo thing sounds cool. Microsoft has a Research app called Group Shot that can stitch numerous photos together to make a group shot. The problem is, people aren't statues, and the movement of bodies becomes very obvious when a part of someones shoulder is 3 inches higher than the part next to it. I'd gladly pay for a consumer ready adaptation of this technology.
Now everyone can be John Malkovich.
"I bless every day that I continue to live, for every day is pure profit."
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/07/27/books/manjoo-600.jpg
Are you surprised? It is google, they sell advertising.
protecting the identities of [...] law enforcement and military personnel.
Funny, I don't remember LEA/military personnel actively trying to protect OUR privacy lately. One wonders why we shouldn't do the same for them.
So when the airport screeners use their fancy equipment to look at our naked bodies... they can put someone else's face on them?
The mind boggles.
Whose faces are they placing here? Couldn't that then be used to place someone's face in a place where they weren't? I realize it would have to be some kind of perfect storm for that to become a problem (face gets swapped just as someone was committing a crime or what have you), but... I dunno. Unless they're using fake faces, I wonder about this.
Why the hell is there a tiny url (http://www.tinyurl.com/6ehog5) in this story? Where does it point? Goatse? Tubgirl? Some random PDF? This is the stupidest thing I've ever seen slip by the editors. It's not like this is Twittr, where you're limited to 140 bytes.
Maybe Slashcode needs something to automatically follow links in articles and replace them with their target if they redirect.
Nothing for 6-digit uids?
I don't get it . Wouldn't an algorithm that does the usual "pixelifying" effect on faces it finds automatically make more sense? At least for these applications.
Copyright infringement is "piracy" in the same way DRM is "consumer rape"