Showing posts with label us. Show all posts
Showing posts with label us. Show all posts

Tuesday, 17 December 2013

Facial Recognition on Facebook to iPhone Awaits U.S. Code

Facebook Inc. (FB), Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) and other companies planning to use facial-recognition scans for security or tailored sales pitches will help write rules for how images and online profiles can be used.
The U.S. Department of Commerce will start meeting with industry and privacy advocates in February to draft a voluntary code of conduct for using facial recognition products, according to a public notice. The draft will ready by June.
“We are very skeptical about stomping on technology in the cradle,” Mallory Duncan, senior vice president of the Washington-based National Retail Federation Inc., said in a phone interview. “It’s not a good idea to develop codes or laws that freeze technology before you have the ability of determining what it’s capable of achieving.”
In the U.K., Tesco Plc (TSCO) is installing face-scanning technology at its gasoline stations to determine customers’ ages and gender so tailored advertisements can be delivered to them on screens at checkouts. Retailers may be able to compare customers’ images from security cameras with law enforcement photo databases.
Facebook, Apple and other Internet companies have been trying to restore consumer confidence that they protect privacy amid an international backlash over revelations that the U.S. National Security Agency has collected data on their users.
The American Civil Liberties Union and other privacy groups want laws, not voluntary standards, to prevent face scans from being used for spying and tracking. Trade groups like the retail federation, which represents Wal-Mart, oppose regulations or laws they say might cripple an emerging market estimated to reach $6.5 billion by 2018 by MarketsandMarkets, a Dallas research company.

Photo Tagging

Facial detection technology uses a mathematical formula to create a digital template of a person’s face, otherwise known as a faceprint. It underlies one of the more popular Internet activities -- tagging yourself and others in photos uploaded to social media sites like Facebook or within photo management applications such as Apple’s iPhoto.
Kiosks have been developed that can scan a person’s face at a shopping mall to determine gender or age for tailored sales pitches, Duncan said.
An advertising and technology agency in Nashville, Tennessee, called Redpepper is testing an Internet application in which users agree to give access to their Facebook profiles and have their faces scanned by cameras at local businesses when they walk in or by. The application then delivers customized advertising deals to their smartphones.

Commercial Uses

Meanwhile, facial scans are becoming more common to establish identity for secure access to buildings or devices. Apple Inc. (AAPL) received a patent Dec. 3 for a system to use a facial scan to unlock an iPhone or computer.
The U.S. Commerce Department, which will start the discussions in February, says the code of conduct will apply only to commercial use, not to how law enforcement or spy agencies may use it.
The Commerce discussions “can provide meaningful privacy protections without running the risk of legislation that becomes outdated as technology evolves and limits people’s ability to use online services,” Rob Sherman, policy manager for Menlo Park, California-based Facebook, said in an e-mailed statement. Facebook has almost 1.2 billion users and doesn’t disclose how many faceprints it has assembled.

Secret Surveillance

Kristin Huguet, an Apple spokeswoman, said the Cupertino, California-based company declined to comment.
Wal-Mart doesn’t use facial recognition in its stores but is looking into the technology primarily for security purposes, Brooke Buchanan, a company spokeswoman, said in a phone interview. The company will be represented by NRF at the Commerce talks.
Voluntary standards written primarily by companies with a business stake in using facial recognition won’t ensure adequate protection of people’s privacy, such as preventing facial scans of people without their knowledge, said Christopher Calabrese, an ACLU lawyer in Washington.
“One of the most serious concerns about facial recognition is it allows secret surveillance at a distance,” he said in a phone interview. “Suddenly, you’re really not anonymous in public anymore.”

NSA Backlash

Once a company obtains facial images, it can use them to identify people, track their movements and build profiles of their personal lives, Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy, a privacy advocacy group in Washington, said in a phone interview.
“This is all about giving a digital stamp of approval to the industry’s ever growing collection of U.S. consumer data,” Chester said.
Companies can combine facial data with applications that track a person’s location or online browsing habits, Chester said. This “commercial surveillance” is vulnerable to being searched or obtained by the NSA or other government agencies, no matter how companies try to protect it, he said.
The NSA has hacked into fiber-optic cables abroad to access Internet companies’ data and uses court orders to force businesses to turn over customer information, including so-called cookies that track websites they’ve viewed, according to reports in the Washington Post, the New YorkTimes and the U.K.’s Guardian newspaper.
The reports were based on documents leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, who is now in Russia on temporary asylum.

‘Reason for Alarm’

Growth in the facial-recognition market is being fueled by cameras with the ability to capture quality photos, databases with photos linked to people’s online identities, and computing power to analyze images, Joseph Atick, co-founder of the Washington-based International Biometrics and Identification Association, said in a phone interview.
“This is a perfect storm,” said Atick, who pioneered the technology in the 1990s. “There is reason for alarm.”
The association, which represents Lockheed Martin Corp. (LMT) and other technology companies that work with facial recognition software and hardware, wants the code of conduct to be voluntary with the Federal Trade Commission supervising how companies implement it, Atick said.
Lockheed Martin “is committed to policies setting forth privacy practices for facial recognition technology,” although it is premature “to discuss the specifics of the issue as the guidelines are still being drafted,” Donna Savarese, a spokeswoman for the Bethesda, Maryland-based company, said in an e-mailed statement.

Enforcing Conduct

Companies should be required to notify people and get their consent before using the technology on them, Atick said. Companies that pledge to abide by the code and fail to do so could be punished by the trade commission or face class-action lawsuits, he said.
The technology holds great potential to benefit society, for commercial proposes and security uses such as finding criminals, Atick said. It must be handled with “the utmost care” in order to not lose the confidence of consumers and citizens, he said.

Monday, 16 December 2013

Datawind releases $37.99 Android tablet in US

UbiSlate 7Ci
This tablet costs less than a meal for two at a nice restaurant.
(Credit: Datawind)

Datawind first made waves back in 2011 with an Android tablet available to the schools in India for a government-subsidized price of $22. Known as the Aakash 2, the little tablet that could is now available in the US for $37.99 under the name UbiSlate 7Ci.
The UbiSlate 7Ci anchors a lineup of tablets running Android 4.0. For the meager pricetag, you get an 800x400-pixel 7-inch touch screen, 512MB of RAM, 4GB of flash memory, Wi-Fi, and a 1GHz processor. Those specs aren't going to knock you off your couch, but it's completely within the realm of reason for less than $40.
If you want more features, look higher into the UbiSlate lineup. The UbiSlate 3G7 can take a SIM card, has a 1.2GHz processor, and a better screen resolution for $129.99.
Chances are, if you're interested in an UbiSlate, you're interested in the dirt-cheap version. They're so cheap, you might consider tiling your floor with them.
The 7Ci won't win in a battle with the latest Apple and Google tablets, but it is looking to fill a niche in education as an inexpensive way to get kids connected with technology.
Making the 7Ci available to the general public should give hackers and makers an affordable device to play around with. Plus, you won't cry if you accidentally break it. It's available in limited quantities ahead of the holidays. Stocking-stuffer, perhaps?

Friday, 13 December 2013

Japan now the biggest spender in the iOS App Store/Google Play

Recently, we heard that Japan absolutely loves its iOS devices. In the last batch of stats, it was the only country where iOS had a larger market share than Android at over 60%. Then we heard that most of the top phones and tablets in Japan are all Apple devices. Now, we're finding out that Japan has some deep pocket when it comes to purchasing apps in both the iOS App Store and Google Play.

The data comes from App Annie, which is saying that Japan has grown immensely in the last year and is now the biggest spender in app stores. As of October 2012, Japan averaged about $100 million in combined monthly revenue for the iOS App Store and Google Play; and as of October 2013, that number had more than tripled to just under $350 million. Over that same span, the U.S. grew from about $175 million in combined monthly revenue 
Japan now the biggest spender in the iOS App Store/Google Play
to just over $300 million. 

Even more impressive is the fact that even though Apple devices dominate the Japanese market, Google Play has caught up to the iOS App Store in terms of revenue in Japan. This is the only country in the world where Google Play earns as much as the App Store. So, the relatively few customers with Android devices are spending quite a bit of money. App Annie says that the Google Play revenue growth has been driven by just five publishers (an educated guess even before reading the report told us that Dragon & Puzzles would be mentioned). Not surprisingly, D&P publisher GungHo Online is one of those five, as is messaging app LINE. 

By all indications, next year Japan will absolutely crush all other regions in app store revenue