PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Academic calls for laws to address intrusive potential of face recognition technologies

2015-06-19
(Press-News.org) A telecommunications law academic in Australia has recommended for laws to be enacted criminalising the application of face recognition technology to visual images online that enable the identity of a person or people to be ascertained without their consent.

An article published today in the International Journal of Law and Information Technology has looked at the absence of laws surrounding face recognition technologies and has found that there are no laws which specifically address the issue of unauthorised application of face recognition technologies to online images. With the increasing popularity of uploading photographs on social networking sites, the paper calls for law and policy makers around the world to see this as a critical issue. Author of the paper, Associate Professor Niloufer Selvadurai says that, "there is a need to protect individual identity and autonomy through enactment of appropriate laws to countervail the potential threats to privacy posed by the application of facial recognition technologies."

Face recognition technologies involve a one-to-many process of identification whereby complex algorithms relating to facial features and appearance are utilised to identify an unknown party from a set of known possibilities. This comparison feature of the technology is what houses the potential to undermine individual privacy. Using Australian law as an example case study as well as looking at laws and social norms around the world, the article analyses one of the fastest growing areas of biometric technology and concludes that this technology could be readily accessible to the general public, moving it beyond commercial systems. Although face recognition technologies have been in use for some time, it has been enhanced by the relatively recent development of 3D scanning technology which enables significantly increased accuracy. The article infers that the current approach is not suitable to the modern digital environment. They also talk about the need to appreciate a 'two-way mirror model of the internet' - where public and private users are simultaneously watching and being watched - when thinking about new laws to protect privacy from face recognition technology.

The author commented that "the law should be responsible for creating private spaces within the otherwise public space of the internet". They went on to say that, "it is recommended that a new part be added to the Criminal Code that prohibits the application of face recognition technologies to visual images on the internet so as to obtain information on identity." The article also stressed the importance of exceptions relating to national security and law enforcement.

The laws recommended by Associate Professor Selvadurai encourage the protection of online identity by enabling an individual to be "just a face in the crowd".

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The simplistic beauty of a free radical

2015-06-19
The study was conducted at the Center for Self-Assembly and Complexity within the Institute for Basic Science (IBS) in South Korea. Director Kimoon Kim and his team experimented with nitric oxide, a highly stable molecule of supreme importance in science. NO is highly reactive and a free radical, meaning a single, unpaired electron is present in its molecule. Put simply NO plays the role of a mediator between elements and helps them combine. Radicals are regularly generated in many metabolic pathways. Some of these radicals can exist in a free form and subsequently interact ...

Researchers discover deep sea sharks are buoyant

Researchers discover deep sea sharks are buoyant
2015-06-19
In a study published recently, scientists from the University of Hawai'i - Mānoa (UHM) and University of Tokyo revealed that two species of deep-sea sharks, six-gill and prickly sharks, are positively buoyant - they have to work harder to swim downward than up, and they can glide uphill for minutes at a time without using their tails. Conventional wisdom suggests that sharks are negatively, or occasionally neutrally, buoyant. Sharks have cartilaginous skeletons, which are lower in density than bone, and they generate buoyancy via their large, oil-filled liver. ...

X-ray imaging reveals secrets in battery materials

2015-06-19
In a new study, researchers explain why one particular cathode material works well at high voltages, while most other cathodes do not. The insights, published in the 19 June issue of the journal Science, could help battery developers design rechargeable lithium-ion batteries that operate at higher voltages. Researchers used a powerful X-ray imaging technique combined with new data analysis algorithms to gain insights -- at the nanoscale level -- on the mechanical properties of a cathode material called an LNMO spinel (composed of lithium, nickel, manganese and oxygen ...

Zebrafish provide a novel model to study short bowel syndrome

2015-06-19
Investigators at Children's Hospital Los Angeles are providing new hope for babies with short bowel syndrome (SBS) by developing a novel model of SBS in zebrafish, described in a paper published online on June 18 by the American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology. SBS is a highly morbid disease where the small intestine is either shortened or non-functional, leaving the patient with the inability to absorb enough nutrients from food. This results in profound malnutrition, dehydration, and can be fatal. Some patients increase their ability ...

Proposed floodplain restoration reduces flood risk and restores salmon habitat

2015-06-19
Salmon are severely impacted by the loss of floodplain habitats throughout the West Coast. In few places is this more pronounced than in Oregon's Tillamook Bay, where nearly 90 percent of estuaries' tidal wetlands have been lost to development -- threatening the survival of federally-protected coho salmon and the safety of the local community. Now, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, NOAA Fisheries, and others have come together to reduce flood risk, increase resiliency of the ecosystem, and restore salmon habitat in Tillamook Bay by coordinating and aligning their ...

UCLA research offers more evidence for possible link between cocaine use and HIV infection

2015-06-19
New UCLA research offers further evidence that cocaine use disrupts the immune system, making people who use it more likely to become infected with HIV. In research published online June 18 in the peer-reviewed journal Scientific Reports, researchers with the UCLA AIDS Institute and Center for AIDS Research used an advanced form of humanized mice -- that is, immunodeficient mice engineered to have a human-like immune system -- to study the effects of cocaine. The findings suggest that using cocaine makes people significantly more susceptible to HIV infection. 'Substance ...

MARCO applauds fishery council move to protect deep sea corals

MARCO applauds fishery council move to protect deep sea corals
2015-06-19
VIRGINIA BEACH. The Mid-Atlantic Regional Council on the Ocean (MARCO) applauds the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Council (MAFMC) on their recent approval of an amendment to protect deep sea corals from the impacts of fishing gear in the Mid-Atlantic. If approved by the Secretary of Commerce, the amendment will create "deep sea coral protection zones" in areas where corals have been observed or where they are likely to occur. In total, the areas proposed for designation encompass more than 38,000 square miles - an area nearly the size of Virginia. Established by the ...

Highly educated women stop smoking if the cost goes up

Highly educated women stop smoking if the cost goes up
2015-06-19
Cigarette prices and images on cigarette packets have an impact on women in terms of continuing to smoke or quitting. In fact, less educated women are more responsive to pictorial labels on cigarette packets, as revealed by a study that has analysed, for the first time, the generation differences among female smokers, a group which, despite policy measures, has not stopped growing. In Spain, smoking levels are declining among men, but this trait does not extend to women. In the face of this phenomenon, experts claim that policy measures are needed to tackle such gender ...

EMBL scientists solve decades-old cell biology puzzle

EMBL scientists solve decades-old cell biology puzzle
2015-06-19
Clathrin proteins involved in endocytosis form a lattice that can dramatically change its shape Combination of fluorescence microscopy and 3D electron microscopy allows quantitative data to be analysed Results offer new understanding of role of clathrin in endocytosis Researchers at EMBL Heidelberg have solved a question that has puzzled cell biologists for decades - how does the protein machine that allows cells to swallow up molecules during endocytosis function? Endocytosis is the process by which cells engulf molecules and draw them inside the cell where they perform ...

Autism: The value of an integrated approach to diagnosis

2015-06-19
This news release is available in French. Researchers at Inserm (Inserm Unit 930 "Imaging and Brain") attached to François-Rabelais University and Tours Regional University Hospital have combined three clinical, neurophysiological and genetic approaches in order to better understand the brain mechanisms that cause autism. When tested on two families, this strategy enabled the researchers to identify specific gene combinations in autistic patients that distinguished them from patients with intellectual disabilities. This study, published in the journal Molecular ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Adverse childhood experiences in firstborns associated with poor mental health of siblings

Montana State scientists publish new research on ancient life found in Yellowstone hot springs

Generative AI bias poses risk to democratic values

Study examines how African farmers are adapting to mountain climate change

Exposure to air pollution associated with more hospital admissions for lower respiratory infections

Microscopy approach offers new way to study cancer therapeutics at single-cell level

How flooding soybeans in early reproductive stages impacts yield, seed composition

Gene therapy may be “one shot stop” for rare bone disease

Protection for small-scale producers and the environment?

Researchers solve a fluid mechanics mystery

New grant funds first-of-its-kind gene therapy to treat aggressive brain cancer

HHS external communications pause prevents critical updates on current public health threats

New ACP guideline on migraine prevention shows no clinically important advantages for newer, expensive medications

Revolutionary lubricant prevents friction at high temperatures

Do women talk more than men? It might depend on their age

The right kind of fusion neutrons

The cost of preventing extinction of Australia’s priority species

JMIR Publications announces new CEO

NCSA awards 17 students Fiddler Innovation Fellowships

How prenatal alcohol exposure affects behavior into adulthood

Does the neuron know the electrode is there?

Vilcek Foundation celebrates immigrant scientists with $250,000 in prizes

Age and sex differences in efficacy of treatments for type 2 diabetes

Octopuses have some of the oldest known sex chromosomes

High-yield rice breed emits up to 70% less methane

Long COVID prevalence and associated activity limitation in US children

Intersection of race and rurality with health care–associated infections and subsequent outcomes

Risk of attempted and completed suicide in persons diagnosed with headache

Adolescent smartphone use during school hours

Alarming rise in rates of advanced prostate cancer in California

[Press-News.org] Academic calls for laws to address intrusive potential of face recognition technologies