Code reviewed by WIRED uncovered an unreleased face-recognition system embedded in Meta’s smart glasses platform. It’s designed to identify people via biometric data stored on users’ phones.
A flaw in Hugging Face Transformers could allow malicious AI models to execute code, exposing credentials and highlighting AI supply chain risks.
The code WIRED identified is gone from the latest version of Meta AI, the companion app for the company’s smart glasses. Meta won’t say why or whether it’s coming back.
Dormant face-recognition code reportedly appeared in Meta’s smart glasses app, then disappeared after scrutiny. That has put Meta’s AI eyewear plans back under the privacy spotlight.The Latest Tech ...
Citrix NetScaler received patches for another memory leak vulnerability similar to CitrixBleed, as well as memory overflow, file read and denial-of-service issues ...
Companies are still experimenting with automated AI systems to find security weaknesses, but fewer are relying on the ...
Meta is facing renewed scrutiny after a report revealed that the company quietly embedded face-recognition technology into software linked to its smart glasses ecosystem, potentially laying the ...
Tom Fenton moves from local AI concepts to hands-on tools for matching LLMs to hardware, running local chatbots with Ollama and benchmarking AI performance.
Jaws, The Descent, and King Kong are all among the greatest, must-watch adventure horror movies that excite and terrify in ...
The malware program has been deployed across multiple sectors since April, helping to provide initial access sold to ransomware gangs.
A document from the Department of Homeland Security outlines plans to issue local police facial recognition technology used ...