{"componentChunkName":"component---src-templates-blog-list-js","path":"/170","result":{"data":{"site":{"siteMetadata":{"title":"No Frills News"}},"allContentfulNfnPost":{"edges":[{"node":{"postTitle":"Detroit mother files lawsuit over facial recognition arrest","slug":"detroit-mother-files-lawsuit-over-facial-recognition-arrest","publishDate":"None","createdLocal":"2023-08-11 14:31:03.602316","feedName":"Image Recognition","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":""}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"Xperi Shares Dip 8% Following Q2 Earnings Reveal","slug":"xperi-shares-dip-8-following-q2-earnings-reveal","publishDate":"2023-08-10 20:15:34+00:00","createdLocal":"2023-08-11 14:31:03.407091","feedName":"Connected Car","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>The parent company of HD Radio, DTS AutoStage and TiVo on Thursday saw its stock decline by $1 a share as investors reacted to the release of Q2 2023 results reflecting tepid revenue growth, far lower adjusted EBITDA, and a wider year-over-year operating loss.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"Data privacy startup Osano secures $25M funding boost","slug":"data-privacy-startup-osano-secures-25m-funding-boost","publishDate":"2023-08-10 15:14:00","createdLocal":"2023-08-11 14:31:02.741867","feedName":"Image Recognition","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Dive Brief:Osano, provider of a data privacy management platform, raised $25 million in a Series B funding round as the company seeks to expand its footprint in the growing industry, the company announced Thursday.\nThe funding boost will allow the Austin, Texas-based startup — whose platform is designed to help companies ensure compliance with data privacy requirements across legal jurisdictions — to beef up multiple departments, including engineering, product development and sales, among other initiatives, according to a press release.\nInstead, companies in the U.S. face a patchwork of privacy laws and regulations at the federal and state levels.\nIn addition, global companies may need to comply with overseas privacy laws such as the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation.\nThe global data privacy software market size was valued at about $2 billion last year and is projected to reach $30.31 billion by 2030, the study said.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"Chip shortage in Germany's car industry will last years - Audi manager","slug":"chip-shortage-in-germany-s-car-industry-will-last-years-audi-manager","publishDate":"None","createdLocal":"2023-08-11 14:31:02.623540","feedName":"Connected Car","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>BERLIN : Semiconductor shortages that have created bottlenecks for Germany's car industry will take years to resolve despite chipmakers' plans to build factories in the country, a senior Audi manager was quoted as saying on Friday.\nExecutives and policymakers are re-thinking supply lines and trying to reduce reliance on a handful of Asian and U.S. chip suppliers.\nBerlin has been courting the world's largest contract chipmakers with billions of euros in subsidies.\nChipmakers such as U.S. Intel and Taiwan's TSMC this year announced plans to build factories in Germany.\nIt's about billions of dollars are being invested,\" Renate Vachenauer, head of procurement at Volkswagen-owned Audi, was quoted as saying by Augsburger Allgemeine newspaper.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"Human error or technical problem? Facial recognition software faces controversy","slug":"human-error-or-technical-problem-facial-recognition-software-faces-controversy","publishDate":"None","createdLocal":"2023-08-11 14:31:01.424306","feedName":"Image Recognition","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":""}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"When AI Facial Recognition Identifies You for a Crime You Didn’t Commit","slug":"when-ai-facial-recognition-identifies-you-for-a-crime-you-didnt-commit","publishDate":"2023-08-10 10:10:45+00:00","createdLocal":"2023-08-11 14:31:00.461998","feedName":"Image Recognition","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Lawsuits against police using facial recognition to arrest people keep cropping up in the United States.\nHowever, how ethical is it to keep “testing” AI facial recognition technology (FRT) to arrest people who may be innocent in the meantime?\nAdvertisementsHow ethical is it to use AI facial recognition in general, knowing how much it may represent a constant violation of our privacy – always able to identify individuals without their consent?\nIn theory, facial recognition matches had to be used only as an investigative lead, not as the sole proof needed to charge Williams with a crime.\nWhen the fake ID was scanned by facial recognition technology, Nijeer Parks was identified as a “high-profile” match.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"California agency approves San Francisco robotaxi expansion amid heavy opposition","slug":"california-agency-approves-san-francisco-robotaxi-expansion-amid-heavy-opposition","publishDate":"2023-08-11 00:00:00","createdLocal":"2023-08-11 14:30:59.862833","feedName":"Autonomous Vehicle News","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>In an aerial view, Waymo autonomous vehicles sit parked in a staging area on June 08, 2023 in San Francisco, California.\nJustin Sullivan | Getty ImagesAlphabet Inc's Waymo and General Motors' Cruise can operate paid robotaxi services using unmanned self-driving vehicles throughout San Francisco, California state regulators voted on Thursday, in the face of vigorous pushback from city transportation, safety agencies and many residents.\nThe move marks a critical step forward in regulating the robot cars, which Waymo, Cruise and others have been systematically rolling out in cities and states around the nation.\nSan Francisco, however, is important as a both symbolic hub of tech and, with over 500 autonomous vehicles already in operation, it is the largest test lab for the experimental cars.\nThe vehicles, with empty driver seats and self-turning steering wheels, have become a common sight around San Francisco.</p>"}}}},{"node":{"postTitle":"Vehicle-to-infrastructure connectivity is finally changing America's streets","slug":"vehicle-to-infrastructure-connectivity-is-finally-changing-america-s-streets","publishDate":"2023-08-10 11:32:46-04:00","createdLocal":"2023-08-11 14:30:59.505601","feedName":"Connected Car","postSummary":{"childMarkdownRemark":{"html":"<p>Vehicle-to-infrastructure connectivity is finally changing America’s streetsSanta Clara County in California is giving buses more green lights.\nA long stalemate over the details of deploying vehicle-to-infrastructure technology has ended, and the investments keep coming.\nThe federal government requested proposals for more solutions this year, with vehicle connectivity groups calling 2023 \"pivotal.\"\nVehicle-to-infrastructure technology allows vehicles and smart public infrastructure, such as traffic lights, to interact.\nThe U.S. Department of Transportation predicts that 12 percent of potential crash scenarios could be avoided using the technology.</p>"}}}}]}},"pageContext":{"limit":8,"skip":1352,"homeNumPages":1077,"currentPage":170}}}