Tag Archive for: Wonders

Facebook wants to turbo-charge smart glasses. Researcher wonders if it can do it right


Facebook wants to turbo-charge smart glasses. Researcher wonders if it can do it right

A computer security and privacy researcher who also is an investor in augmented reality took a look at Facebook’s latest smart-glasses project and found biometric-identifier concerns for the recordable world as well as for the recorder.

In an opinion article published by The Conversation, Indiana University computer science professor Apu Kapadia compares Facebook’s Ego4D project with what he and his IU team have learned in studying sociological facets of people walking the Earth with AI-supported recording and reporting devices on their faces.

The Ego4D dataset can be used for algorithmic training, from biometric recognition to robotics performance in unstructured environments. Facebook is keen to facilitate development that would make smart glasses almost a new external lobe of the human brain.

Kapadia writes that biometric privacy concerns and AI ethics demand that Facebook executives frame in their own minds how dangerous and socially disruptive smart glasses will be if treated as another revenue-producing app.

(The researcher is an investor in Snap Inc., owner of augmented-reality social media service Snapchat. He also has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the Department of Defense and Microsoft Research; and had twice received Google’s faculty research award.)

It is good advice and timely as Facebook defends itself against insider accusations that leaders allegedly have chosen profits over the safety and health of their own subscribers, some of whom are children.

And, earlier this fall, the company had to disable an AI algorithm said to be the source of photos of Black men labeled “primates.”

Ego4D, is an egocentric, or first-person, video dataset available to the public, with benchmarks. The video and audio data, totaling 3,025 narrated hours of mostly “unscripted” content, was collected by 855 participants in nine countries as they went about their lives wearing smart glasses for up to 10 hours a day.

Privacy concerns by and angry reaction of people seeing that they are being recorded by smart glasses are well-reported, spawning the term glasshole for wearers of Google’s Glass. And that was before an increase in…

Source…

Copyright Troll Gets Smacked Around By Court, As Judge Wonders If Some Of Its Experts Even Exist

When last we checked in with Venice PI, the copyright troll claiming to hold rights to the movie Once Upon A Time In Venice and attempting to claim in court that a 91 year old man with dementia was part of a torrent swarm offering the movie who, oh by the way, had recently passed away, it was being lightly slapped around by judge Thomas Zilly. Zilly had barred Venice PI from contacting the family of the deceased, halted the trial, questioned the quality of the evidence Venice PI had put before the court, and likewise demanded more information on how that evidence was collected in the first place. Given that the evidence mostly amounted to IP addresses obtained by Venice PI, I had written that this particular judge was likely to be unimpressed by whatever the copyright troll provided.

Well, hoo-boy, was that ever an understatement. The end result of what Venice PI put before the court in response was the judge issuing a minute order declaring that the company essentially explain its copyright trolling efforts entirely across several cases and slapped the company around for some truly stunning misbehavior. The order goes into three different areas in which Venice PI appears to have really, truly screwed up, starting with the fact that the troll’s claims of ownership and affiliations can’t even be substantiated.

“A search of the California Secretary of State’s online database, however, reveals no registered entity with the name ‘Lost Dog’ or ‘Lost Dog Productions’. Moreover, although ‘Voltage Pictures, LLC’ is registered with the California Secretary of State, and has the same address as Venice PI, LLC, the parent company named in plaintiff’s corporate disclosure form, ‘Voltage Productions, LLC,’ cannot be found in the California Secretary of State’s online database and does not appear to exist.”

This rightly is giving the court the impression that something is shady in all of this. We’ve seen this sort of corporate shuffling shell game in copyright troll cases before and it’s never a good sign. Still, the truly alarming stuff is further along in the order and has to do with exactly how Venice IP is collecting its supposed evidence.

GuardaLey CEO Benjamin Perino, who claims that he coded the tracking software, wrote a declaration explaining that the infringement detection system at issue “cannot yield a false positive.” However, the Court doubts this statement and Perino’s qualifications in general.

“Perino has been proffered as an expert, but his qualifications consist of a technical high school education and work experience unrelated to the peer-to-peer file-sharing technology known as BitTorrent,” the Court writes. “Perino does not have the qualifications necessary to be considered an expert in the field in question, and his opinion that the surveillance program is incapable of error is both contrary to common sense and inconsistent with plaintiff’s counsel’s conduct in other matters in this district. Plaintiff has not submitted an adequate offer of proof.”

Guardaley, of course, is the shifty, shady company out of Germany that we’ve written about many times before. In the past, it’s been somewhat difficult to separate Guardaley from, for instance, Malibu Media and its notoriously suspect trolling efforts. As we’ve noted before, part of the Guardaley modus operandi appears to be supplying front-lawyers with so-called experts that proclaim the company’s technology for finding real pirates somehow perfect in every respect, just as is happening here. Interestingly, the company’s internal documents that declare the experts it relies on iffy at best haven’t appeared to deter their use in the courtroom.

Guardaley also, somewhat infamously, has used a number of different names for its own operation, and variously names a bunch of “experts” who some sites have argued don’t exist. Judge Zilly now seems to be wondering if these people exist as well:

The Court has recently become aware that Arheidt is the latest in a series of German declarants (Darren M. Griffin, Daniel Macek, Daniel Susac, Tobias Fieser, Michael Patzer) who might be aliases or even fictitious…. Plaintiff will not be permitted to rely on Arheidt’s declarations or underlying data without explaining to the Court’s satisfaction Arheidt’s relationship to the above-listed declarants and producing proof beyond a reasonable doubt of Arheidt’s existence.

Suffice it to say, when the judge in your case is questioning the very existence of one of the key people supporting your story, you’re probably in trouble.

So, now we’re coupling a shady company with shady software that collects evidence, written by someone who claims his software is infallible but doesn’t have the necessary credentials to back up such an absurd declaration. It’s pretty clear at this point that the Judge Zilly is quite suspicious of the type of operation he’s dealing with, and with good reason. It’s long been known that IP addresses are shaky evidence at best, and having someone claim he can gather IP addresses completely without false positives is totally laughable. That Venice IP decided its best expert witness to the quality of its evidence was the guy who wrote the software that collected said evidence is nearly hilarious in its vanity.

There’s also the fact that Arheidt, if he exists, may be breaking the law, and the lawyer for Venice IP was aware of that… and failed to disclose this fact:

Nowhere in Arheidt’s declarations does he indicate that either he or MaverickEye is licensed in Washington to conduct private investigation work. See RCW 18.165.150 (performing the functions of a private investigator without a license is a gross misdemeanor); see also RCW 18.165.010(12)(e) (defining a “private investigator agency” to include a person or entity that is in the business of “detecting, discovering, or revealing . . . [e]vidence to be used before a court”). Plaintiff’s counsel has apparently been aware since October 2016, when he received a letter concerning LHF Productions, Inc. v. Collins, C16-1017 RSM, that Arheidt might be committing a crime by engaging in unlicensed surveillance of Washington citizens,2 but he did not disclose this fact to the Court or offer any analysis for why such conduct is not prohibited by RCW 18.165.150. Plaintiff’s counsel’s lack of candor was a serious breach of his ethical duties…

Gross incompetence is a phrase that leaps to mind, and it is frankly one of the kinder assessments of exactly what’s going on here. To that end, Zilly’s order requires that the company provide further details to explain these deficiencies in over a dozen cases and orders Venice PI not to spend or transfer any money it has collected via settlements. That latter bit seems to indicate that the court may seek to have that money repaid to past victims of this trolling operation.

Next up: perhaps Judge Zilly can follow in the footsteps of Judge Otis Wright, and demand to know what the hell is really going on here… and refer those responsible for possible criminal prosecution.

Permalink | Comments | Email This Story

Techdirt.