... In 2017, IBM released Intelligent Video Analytics 2.0, a product with a body camera surveillance capability that allows users to detect people captured on camera by “ethnicity” tags, such as “Asian,” “Black,” and “White.”
Kjeldsen, the former IBM researcher who helped develop the company’s skin tone analytics with NYPD camera access, said the department’s claim that the NYPD simply tested and rejected the bodily search features was misleading. “We would have not explored it had the NYPD told us, ‘We don’t want to do that,’” he said. “No company is going to spend money where there’s not customer interest.”
So yeah, it's literally about the NYPD requesting a feature to have the software sort people in the videos by personally identifying features... prior to a warrant for each person. If you're unfamiliar with the fourth and fourteenth amendments to the constitution, or the concept of due process, the best time to read them would have been before this system existed, the second best time is now.
The racism part is a red herring, but at least it got people to pay attention. The problem prior to that, is that it's an enormous number of unreasonable searches. That it's also a massive civil rights violation is icing on the cake for any lawyer who decides to act on it.
Conflating localization with mishandling is quite subtle.
Or perhaps I'm wrong. Did space.com misrepresent the number of significant figures in any of the unit conversions? That could genuinely be mishandling.
This is no more "dumbing down" reporting than adjusting reported times for the current timezone. Insisting on times in UTC has some merit, but isn't necessary, and is just as arbitrary as demanding SI units.
I wish I could mod the first link in TFS as offtopic. The rest is about a study in England, by an English University. The first link is some combination of narcissistic and masturbatory.
tl;dr
The study isn't about Americans.* That Americans also waste time commuting, and not getting compensated for work done, is tangential.
*Unless they happen to be Americans abroad that commute on lines into London, England, regularly.
In other languages you could define main(), maiN(), maIn(), maIN(), mAin(), mAiN(), mAIn(), mAIN(), Main(), MaiN(), MaIn(), MaIN(), MAin(), MAiN(), MAIn(), and MAIN(). It's probably a bad idea to do so. Whether you choose to or not isn't the responsibility of the language.
That's been my experience too.
I can translate things, and did it as a job, and can and have demonstrated my skills.
I don't need any fingers to count the number of people so far that have been willing to pay me based on that skill.
First I have this question: does this research mean homeopathy and "memory of water" is true after all?
It doesn't sound like it, the "freezing" in the paper only mentions the water while it's constrained by the boron nitride or carbon nanotubing. No mention at all of water exhibiting behavior based on past exposure to other chemicals that are no longer present.
Twitter and other social media are effectively public platforms.
Yes, at least in common sense. Are they legally public spaces? I argue that they are public spaces if we translate physical world law to virtual world law.
In that Trump Twitter case, the judge ruled that denying access to his posts was denying citizen's their right to speech. If responding to Tweets is speech, then surely broadcasting them is also protected (as well as YouTube videos, FaceBook posts, and so on).
No, because he was using Twitter as a mouthpiece for the government, and the government cannot censor speech. The same requirement is not made of private entities, possibly with the exceptions mentioned above.
I think that's the best argument for reinstating Net Neutrality, without actually mentioning it directly, that I've ever read.
Current version of GalliumOS supports most Chromebooks. It's an Ubuntu 16.04 base with adjustments for specific chromebook models (media key customization, other hardware configurations, etc. Doesn't seem to support ARM chipsets or Intel Pineview boards. Systems that are supported by GalliumOS
and the newer version based on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS is in the works
version 3.0 alpha
"Would you like to tag someone in this photo?" Facebook asks as it displays an MRI with an arrow pointing to something the AI identified.
Next step, CAPTCHA codes asking you to click until all of the MRI scans showing malignant growths are gone.
The nation was based on the notion that property ownership gives individuals a stake in the system.
The type of property that this refers to, is real property. The clothes on your back don't give you a stake, the ground beneath your feet does. This is why some feel those that only rent their home should not have the right to vote.
The ground beneath your feet does not give you a stake, the mind and body you're born with does. The whole "landed aristocracy" thing tends to lead to events like the French Revolution. Land ownership is a weak excuse used to deprive others of a say in how things are run.
... In 2017, IBM released Intelligent Video Analytics 2.0, a product with a body camera surveillance capability that allows users to detect people captured on camera by “ethnicity” tags, such as “Asian,” “Black,” and “White.”
Kjeldsen, the former IBM researcher who helped develop the company’s skin tone analytics with NYPD camera access, said the department’s claim that the NYPD simply tested and rejected the bodily search features was misleading. “We would have not explored it had the NYPD told us, ‘We don’t want to do that,’” he said. “No company is going to spend money where there’s not customer interest.”
So yeah, it's literally about the NYPD requesting a feature to have the software sort people in the videos by personally identifying features... prior to a warrant for each person. If you're unfamiliar with the fourth and fourteenth amendments to the constitution, or the concept of due process, the best time to read them would have been before this system existed, the second best time is now.
The racism part is a red herring, but at least it got people to pay attention. The problem prior to that, is that it's an enormous number of unreasonable searches. That it's also a massive civil rights violation is icing on the cake for any lawyer who decides to act on it.
troll/10
Conflating localization with mishandling is quite subtle.
Or perhaps I'm wrong. Did space.com misrepresent the number of significant figures in any of the unit conversions? That could genuinely be mishandling.
This is no more "dumbing down" reporting than adjusting reported times for the current timezone. Insisting on times in UTC has some merit, but isn't necessary, and is just as arbitrary as demanding SI units.
That's so old fashioned. This week it's "Old Man Yells at Blockchain".
I got someone to pay me to not mute him in a forum. Also, it got me nude pics from girls and a few friends.
So that's why the TLAs are hording all the porn.
Of the possibilities, the first non-criminal option is to assume you have a thing for quadriplegics.
It's funny how differently blood relatives are treated compared to other editors that get works published by belated authors.
Sig oddly relevant for once.
[Citation Needed] Preferably one that's also about the UK like the study in the article.
I wish I could mod the first link in TFS as offtopic. The rest is about a study in England, by an English University. The first link is some combination of narcissistic and masturbatory.
tl;dr
The study isn't about Americans.* That Americans also waste time commuting, and not getting compensated for work done, is tangential.
*Unless they happen to be Americans abroad that commute on lines into London, England, regularly.
And be sure to control for salaried vs. hourly-paid employees.
I suspect you mistakenly substituted "should trust Google" in your own diagram, when the customers are those who "do trust Google".
It sounds like you got phished by Capital One for you phone number, have you taken any steps in case they misuse it?
Oh please, all the good names were taken long before Futurama.
But these are a consequence of allowing mixed case identifiers, something you WANT to do.
True
The other is a consequence of something you don't want to do.
False, it's a consequence of something you seem to think someone else could use wrongly. Other people already have useful cases in mind.
A feature or capability without redeeming qualities shouldn't be done simply because it can be.
True, and the fact that someone else can think of redeeming qualities, but that you cannot, is a personal issue. Still not a fault of the language.
Doing the right thing isn't about whose responsibility it is.
True, but not an argument against allowing something optional.
In other languages you could define main(), maiN(), maIn(), maIN(), mAin(), mAiN(), mAIn(), mAIN(), Main(), MaiN(), MaIn(), MaIN(), MAin(), MAiN(), MAIn(), and MAIN(). It's probably a bad idea to do so. Whether you choose to or not isn't the responsibility of the language.
I z^2+c what you did there.
"No results found for your MOS code 98G"
That's been my experience too.
I can translate things, and did it as a job, and can and have demonstrated my skills.
I don't need any fingers to count the number of people so far that have been willing to pay me based on that skill.
First I have this question: does this research mean homeopathy and "memory of water" is true after all?
It doesn't sound like it, the "freezing" in the paper only mentions the water while it's constrained by the boron nitride or carbon nanotubing. No mention at all of water exhibiting behavior based on past exposure to other chemicals that are no longer present.
Yes, at least in common sense. Are they legally public spaces? I argue that they are public spaces if we translate physical world law to virtual world law.
No, because he was using Twitter as a mouthpiece for the government, and the government cannot censor speech. The same requirement is not made of private entities, possibly with the exceptions mentioned above.
I think that's the best argument for reinstating Net Neutrality, without actually mentioning it directly, that I've ever read.
Trump: #metoo
Literally Everyone Else: eww
I hereby straw-Godwin this thread.
Current version of GalliumOS supports most Chromebooks. It's an Ubuntu 16.04 base with adjustments for specific chromebook models (media key customization, other hardware configurations, etc. Doesn't seem to support ARM chipsets or Intel Pineview boards.
Systems that are supported by GalliumOS
and the newer version based on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS is in the works
version 3.0 alpha
"Would you like to tag someone in this photo?" Facebook asks as it displays an MRI with an arrow pointing to something the AI identified. Next step, CAPTCHA codes asking you to click until all of the MRI scans showing malignant growths are gone.
The plural of "pope" is "the Western Schism".
"Today in maths, I learned about the math."
The type of property that this refers to, is real property. The clothes on your back don't give you a stake, the ground beneath your feet does. This is why some feel those that only rent their home should not have the right to vote.
The ground beneath your feet does not give you a stake, the mind and body you're born with does. The whole "landed aristocracy" thing tends to lead to events like the French Revolution. Land ownership is a weak excuse used to deprive others of a say in how things are run.