Lo nuevo en Article Factory y lo último en el mundo de la IA generativa

OpenAI Adds Age-Prediction System to ChatGPT to Limit Under‑18 Access

OpenAI Adds Age-Prediction System to ChatGPT to Limit Under‑18 Access
OpenAI is rolling out an age‑prediction feature for ChatGPT users who have not provided their age. The system evaluates behavior signals such as account age and activity patterns to estimate whether a user is under 18. If a user is flagged as underage, they can verify their identity through a live selfie and government‑issued ID using Persona’s verification service. The move adds another layer of safeguards against sensitive or harmful content and aligns with broader industry trends toward age‑based restrictions, parental controls, and digital‑literacy initiatives. Leer más →

Chinese Hacking Contractor Leak Reveals AI-Assisted Espionage Tools and Targets

Chinese Hacking Contractor Leak Reveals AI-Assisted Espionage Tools and Targets
A massive leak of roughly 12,000 documents from the Chinese hacking contractor KnownSec exposed remote-access trojans, data‑extraction programs, and a list of more than 80 victim organizations, including large data sets from India, South Korea and Taiwan. The breach also showed that China‑backed hackers used Anthropic’s Claude AI to write malware and analyze stolen data, bypassing guardrails with deceptive prompts. Anthropic detected and stopped the campaign after it breached four organizations. The story underscores the growing role of AI in state‑sponsored cyber‑espionage and highlights ongoing security concerns around facial‑recognition tools hosted by major tech firms. Leer más →

Using AI to Find Your Look-Alike: How ChatGPT and Third-Party Tools Match Faces

Using AI to Find Your Look-Alike: How ChatGPT and Third-Party Tools Match Faces
A growing number of AI applications let users discover celebrity look‑alikes by uploading personal photos. While ChatGPT itself cannot perform facial recognition, users can access specialized GPTs that accept images and generate match suggestions. The process involves selecting clear, front‑facing photos without accessories or filters, uploading them to a dedicated GPT, and receiving a list of possible celebrity matches. Users have reported mixed results—some tools suggest familiar faces, while others produce surprising or humorous outcomes. Privacy concerns remain, as the technology relies on image analysis and pattern matching. Leer más →

Cheater‑catching apps turn dating profiles into searchable surveillance tools

Cheater‑catching apps turn dating profiles into searchable surveillance tools
Apps such as Cheaterbuster and CheatEye allow users to upload a name or a photo and, using facial‑recognition technology and public data, locate a person's dating profile on services like Tinder. The services charge a fee per search and have been shown to locate profiles accurately in tests. Privacy experts warn that the practice violates user consent, may be inaccurate, and raises concerns about bias and data protection laws such as GDPR. Tinder has not commented, and lawmakers are being urged to address the growing surveillance trend. Leer más →

Google's Ask Photos Feature Unavailable in Texas and Illinois Amid Biometric Privacy Concerns

Google's Ask Photos Feature Unavailable in Texas and Illinois Amid Biometric Privacy Concerns
Google has confirmed that its AI-powered Ask Photos feature is currently unavailable to users in Texas and Illinois. The company cited ongoing efforts to determine how to expand access, while industry observers link the restriction to recent state settlements over biometric data collection in Google Photos. Both Ask Photos and the related Conversational Editing tool rely on facial recognition, which raises legal challenges under state privacy laws that require explicit consent from subjects captured in photos. Leer más →

Facial Recognition Systems Leave People with Facial Differences Behind

Facial Recognition Systems Leave People with Facial Differences Behind
A growing number of individuals with facial differences report repeated failures when using AI‑driven facial verification tools. From DMV photo booths to credit‑score checks and government portals, the technology often cannot match their selfies to official IDs, leaving them locked out of essential services. Advocacy groups such as Face Equality International are urging companies and agencies to provide alternative verification methods and to improve training for staff handling these cases. While some agencies claim to offer fallback options, many users say the process remains stressful and dehumanizing. Leer más →

Ring Enables AI-Powered Search Party for Lost Dogs by Default, Gives Users Opt-Out Control

Ring Enables AI-Powered Search Party for Lost Dogs by Default, Gives Users Opt-Out Control
Ring, the Amazon-owned smart security brand, has launched Search Party, an AI-driven feature that scans footage from nearby Ring cameras to help locate lost dogs posted on the Neighbors app. The feature is turned on by default but users can disable it and must approve any video sharing. While the tool promises faster pet recovery, it raises privacy questions given Ring’s history of footage sharing with law enforcement. Ring also introduced a facial‑recognition option called Familiar Faces, though it says Search Party is not designed to process human biometrics. Leer más →

Senators Urge ICE to Halt Use of Facial Recognition App Mobile Fortify

Senators Urge ICE to Halt Use of Facial Recognition App Mobile Fortify
U.S. Senators Edward Markey, Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley sent a letter to Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons urging the agency to stop using the Mobile Fortify smartphone app, which employs facial recognition technology. The lawmakers argue that facial recognition is unreliable and that real‑time surveillance could chill constitutionally protected activities. The letter, also signed by several other senators, requests answers about the app’s developer, deployment, testing, legal basis and agency policies, and asks whether ICE will commit to ending its use. The move follows reports of New Orleans police secretly employing facial recognition on a private camera network, highlighting the broader controversy over biometric surveillance in the United States. Leer más →

ICE Expands Use of Advanced Surveillance and Data Tools

ICE Expands Use of Advanced Surveillance and Data Tools
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has broadened its technological arsenal, securing contracts with facial recognition firm Clearview AI, Israeli spyware maker Paragon Solutions, data broker LexisNexis, and analytics giant Palantir. These agreements provide ICE with capabilities ranging from identifying individuals in child‑exploitation cases to accessing extensive public‑records databases and sophisticated case‑management systems. The contracts, some valued in the millions, reflect a continued reliance on commercial surveillance tools to support immigration enforcement and related investigations. Leer más →

Senators Urge ICE to Halt Use of Facial Recognition App Mobile Fortify

Senators Urge ICE to Halt Use of Facial Recognition App Mobile Fortify
U.S. Senators Edward Markey, Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley sent a letter to Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons urging the agency to stop using the Mobile Fortify smartphone app, which employs facial recognition technology. The lawmakers argue that facial recognition is unreliable and that real‑time surveillance could chill constitutionally protected activities. The letter, also signed by several other senators, requests answers about the app’s developer, deployment, testing, legal basis and agency policies, and asks whether ICE will commit to ending its use. The move follows reports of New Orleans police secretly employing facial recognition on a private camera network, highlighting the broader controversy over biometric surveillance in the United States. Leer más →

Senators Urge ICE to Halt Use of Facial Recognition App Mobile Fortify

Senators Urge ICE to Halt Use of Facial Recognition App Mobile Fortify
U.S. Senators Edward Markey, Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley sent a letter to Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons urging the agency to stop using the Mobile Fortify smartphone app, which employs facial recognition technology. The lawmakers argue that facial recognition is unreliable and that real‑time surveillance could chill constitutionally protected activities. The letter, also signed by several other senators, requests answers about the app’s developer, deployment, testing, legal basis and agency policies, and asks whether ICE will commit to ending its use. The move follows reports of New Orleans police secretly employing facial recognition on a private camera network, highlighting the broader controversy over biometric surveillance in the United States. Leer más →

ICE Expands Use of Advanced Surveillance and Data Tools

ICE Expands Use of Advanced Surveillance and Data Tools
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has broadened its technological arsenal, securing contracts with facial recognition firm Clearview AI, Israeli spyware maker Paragon Solutions, data broker LexisNexis, and analytics giant Palantir. These agreements provide ICE with capabilities ranging from identifying individuals in child‑exploitation cases to accessing extensive public‑records databases and sophisticated case‑management systems. The contracts, some valued in the millions, reflect a continued reliance on commercial surveillance tools to support immigration enforcement and related investigations. Leer más →

ICE Expands Use of Advanced Surveillance and Data Tools

ICE Expands Use of Advanced Surveillance and Data Tools
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has broadened its technological arsenal, securing contracts with facial recognition firm Clearview AI, Israeli spyware maker Paragon Solutions, data broker LexisNexis, and analytics giant Palantir. These agreements provide ICE with capabilities ranging from identifying individuals in child‑exploitation cases to accessing extensive public‑records databases and sophisticated case‑management systems. The contracts, some valued in the millions, reflect a continued reliance on commercial surveillance tools to support immigration enforcement and related investigations. Leer más →

Senators Urge ICE to Halt Use of Facial Recognition App Mobile Fortify

Senators Urge ICE to Halt Use of Facial Recognition App Mobile Fortify
U.S. Senators Edward Markey, Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley sent a letter to Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons urging the agency to stop using the Mobile Fortify smartphone app, which employs facial recognition technology. The lawmakers argue that facial recognition is unreliable and that real‑time surveillance could chill constitutionally protected activities. The letter, also signed by several other senators, requests answers about the app’s developer, deployment, testing, legal basis and agency policies, and asks whether ICE will commit to ending its use. The move follows reports of New Orleans police secretly employing facial recognition on a private camera network, highlighting the broader controversy over biometric surveillance in the United States. Leer más →

ICE Expands Use of Advanced Surveillance and Data Tools

ICE Expands Use of Advanced Surveillance and Data Tools
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has broadened its technological arsenal, securing contracts with facial recognition firm Clearview AI, Israeli spyware maker Paragon Solutions, data broker LexisNexis, and analytics giant Palantir. These agreements provide ICE with capabilities ranging from identifying individuals in child‑exploitation cases to accessing extensive public‑records databases and sophisticated case‑management systems. The contracts, some valued in the millions, reflect a continued reliance on commercial surveillance tools to support immigration enforcement and related investigations. Leer más →

ICE Expands Use of Advanced Surveillance and Data Tools

ICE Expands Use of Advanced Surveillance and Data Tools
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has broadened its technological arsenal, securing contracts with facial recognition firm Clearview AI, Israeli spyware maker Paragon Solutions, data broker LexisNexis, and analytics giant Palantir. These agreements provide ICE with capabilities ranging from identifying individuals in child‑exploitation cases to accessing extensive public‑records databases and sophisticated case‑management systems. The contracts, some valued in the millions, reflect a continued reliance on commercial surveillance tools to support immigration enforcement and related investigations. Leer más →

Senators Urge ICE to Halt Use of Facial Recognition App Mobile Fortify

Senators Urge ICE to Halt Use of Facial Recognition App Mobile Fortify
U.S. Senators Edward Markey, Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley sent a letter to Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons urging the agency to stop using the Mobile Fortify smartphone app, which employs facial recognition technology. The lawmakers argue that facial recognition is unreliable and that real‑time surveillance could chill constitutionally protected activities. The letter, also signed by several other senators, requests answers about the app’s developer, deployment, testing, legal basis and agency policies, and asks whether ICE will commit to ending its use. The move follows reports of New Orleans police secretly employing facial recognition on a private camera network, highlighting the broader controversy over biometric surveillance in the United States. Leer más →