Nicholas Xavier Dynon, Te Kunenga ki Pūrehuroa – Massey UniversityFacial recognition technology is becoming more widely used, but this has not been matched by wider acceptance from the public.
Controversies continue to hit the media, with both public and private sector organisations frequently outed for flawed deployments of the technology.
The New Zealand Privacy Commissioner is currently evaluating the results of retailer Foodstuff North Island’s trial of live facial recognition in its stores.
The commissioner is also considering a potential code on the use of biometrics that would govern the use of people’s unique physical characteristics to identify them.
But as facial recognition becomes more common, public acceptance of the technology is inconsistent.
Retail stores, for example, tend to attract controversy when using facial recognition technology. But there has been little resistance to the use of it in airports. And the vast majority of people have no problem unlocking their phones using their faces.
My research draws together 15 studies on the public acceptance of facial recognition technology from the United States, United Kingdom and Australia.
There has been little analysis of New Zealand attitudes to the technology. So, these studies offer a view into how it is accepted in similar countries.
What I found is...
In your face: our acceptance of facial recognition technology depends on who is doing it – and where
New memory technology is 1,000 times faster
Intel and Micron have unveiled "3D XPoint" – a new memory technology that is 1,000 times faster than NAND and 10 times denser than conventional DRAM.
Intel Corporation and Micron Technology, Inc. have unveiled 3D XPoint technology, a non-volatile memory that has the potential to revolutionise any device, application or service that benefits from fast access to large sets of data. Now in production, 3D XPoint technology is a major breakthrough in memory process technology and the first new memory category since the introduction of NAND flash in 1989. The explosion of connected devices and digital services is generating massive amounts of new data. To make this data useful, it must be stored and analysed very quickly, creating challenges for service providers and system builders who must balance cost, power and performance trade-offs when they design memory and storage solutions. 3D XPoint technology combines the performance, density, power, non-volatility and cost advantages of all available memory technologies on the market today. This technology is up to 1,000 times faster, with up to 1,000 times greater endurance than NAND, and is 10 times denser than conventional memory. "For decades, the industry has searched for ways to reduce the
lag time between the processor and data to allow much faster analysis," says Rob Crooke,...
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