Некоммерческое использование материала из моих роликов допускается при обязательном указании авторства и ссылкой на автора.
Для коммерческого использования вы можете написать мне на e-mail: n.nemcev@gmail.com
My wife and I took a random subject we had NEVER every talked about or searched online, and talked about it while her iPhone was on in the background. Two days later, our Facebook advertising completely changed over to cat food for a few days.
UPDATE: Apparently this is up on Reddit and people are talking about this a bit. I made it over a year ago now. So instead of replying to all comments below Ill just post this —
This isnt something I posted to get attention, I really couldnt give a turd if anybody saw this at all. It was just for my friends after we had a conversation about it. So I didnt record too much in depth or make a super scientific video for Reddit etc, but its legit and there were cat food ads for a few days. It wasnt a coincidence because we did this a few times with other keywords we never talk about and it always produced results with other keywords. Its quite funny how odd and fairly specific you can get to get results.
Somebody told me its because Ive given permission to Facebook to use the mic, but I havent tested that out.
Just try it out yourself if you dont believe it. Give it a couple days. Just make sure you do it around your phone, but talk about your subject like hashtags and keywords and make sure its something youve never typed or talked about… again this was a year ago I made this so things may have changed. :)
A former Uber employee alleges in a California lawsuit that a lack of security measures allowed employees to spy on riders through their Uber accounts.
SkullConduct: Biometric User Identification on Eyewear Computers Using Bone Conduction Through the Skull
Stefan Schneegass, Youssef Oualil, Andreas Bulling
Abstract:
Secure user identification is important for the increasing number of eyewear computers but limited input capabilities pose significant usability challenges for established knowledge-based schemes, such as passwords or PINs. We present SkullConduct, a biometric system that uses bone conduction of sound through the users skull as well as a microphone readily integrated into many of these devices, such as Google Glass. At the core of SkullConduct is a method to analyze the characteristic frequency response created by the users skull using a combination of Mel Frequency Cepstral Coefficient (MFCC) features as well as a computationally light-weight 1NN classifier. We report on a controlled experiment with 10 participants that shows that this frequency response is person-specific and stable — even when taking off and putting on the device multiple times — and thus serves as a robust biometric. We show that our method can identify users with 97.0% accuracy and authenticate them with an equal error rate of 6.9%, thereby bringing biometric user identification to eyewear computers equipped with bone conduction technology.
Who watches the watchmen? Probably China. They have a vast 20 million camera surveillance network installed throughout the country, all to keep a watchful eye on those who would deign defy the Party. I mean, traffic. They use it to keep an eye on traffic. Its called Skynet. Seriously. And who helps the Chinese regime operate these all-seeing eyes? Western tech companies of course! Like Cisco and Hewlett Packard! They helped Bo Xilai install half a million security cameras in Chongqing. That is, before his disastrous fall from power. And though the US has Tiananmen export controls in place, restrictions on crime-control related products put in place after the Tiananmen Square Massacre, security cameras and the networks that run them fit into a nice loophole.
Once the stuff of science fiction, facial-scanning cameras are becoming a part of daily life in China, where theyre used for marketing, surveillance and social control. Video: Paolo Bosonin. Photo: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg