• fubo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    One group that doesn’t love this technology is sex workers. The software can’t credibly discern between real escort ads and sex-trafficking-disguised-as-escort ads, meaning consenting adults often get swept up in its surveillance. In fact, a recent study funded by the Department of Justice found that police regularly mistake certain “red flags” in escort ads — like 24/7 availability or the use of specific emojis — for signs of trafficking.

    That Thorn uses Amazon’s facial recognition tool is especially contentious. Research by MIT and the ACLU has shown that it falsely identified people of color, and the company itself has banned police departments from using Rekognition, except in trafficking cases through software like Spotlight.

    • FoundTheVegan@kbin.social
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      In 2011, a public-awareness campaign for DNA featured Donald Trump, Jamie Foxx, and the slogan “Real Men Don’t Buy Girls.”

      Donald - “they just let you do it” - “beauty pageant dressing room” - Trump

      🙄

      Kutcher and his first wife, Demi Moore, founded an organization called DNA in 2009 after watching a Dateline special

      Combine this with Kutcher not knowing Masterson and scientology numerous trafficking accusations really illuminates how unserious they were about the program.

      This was always just a PR move for Kutcher, so he doesn’t care if he is doing damage to legitimate sex workers. Much like FOSTA/SESTA, it’s real easy for anyone who wants to boost their image, lawmakers included, to play the hero as you take a “protect the children at all costs zero tolerance” stance and handwave away the harm you do “helping”.

    • CeeBee@lemmy.world
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      That Thorn uses Amazon’s facial recognition tool is especially contentious. Research by MIT and the ACLU has shown that it falsely identified people of color,

      No, what the ACLU did was knowingly leave the default setting of 80% confidence and do a “surprised” face when they got almost exactly 20% false detections.

      They knew exactly what they were doing.

      Amazon even responded to their claims criticising the lack of proper setup for such a complex system. But the ACLU’s excuse was that it was the default setting, so they just used whatever it came with out of the box.

      So all they managed to prove is that the default setting isn’t adequate for accurate identification, and has nothing to do with what the system is able to do when correctly configured.

      Edit: I see I’m being downvoted for stating facts.

      • CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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        Is there any evidence to suggest that law enforcement agencies have these complex systems properly configured? I’ve seen plenty of articles talking about minorities being arrested after some facial recognition software misidentified them. Claiming that the ACLU isn’t using the software properly doesn’t mean that anyone else is using it properly.

        • CeeBee@lemmy.world
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          You’re talking about something else entirely. The ACLU’s argument is “these systems are so bad we can’t rely on them” and your argument is “law enforcement may not have them configured correctly”.

          One of those is factually false.

          That being said, every FR system is built differently, and have their own advantages and considerations. But from what I’ve seen in the news over the past few years is almost always a policy and procedure failure. At some point between using a photo of such low quality that it shouldn’t be used to the verifying officer looking at the source photo and recognizing the current suspect are different people, something broke down.

          I’m actually astonished at how bad the average person is at comparing photos of people. Just look up the conspiracy nonsense these flat earthers go on about regarding the Challenger accident. They are convinced that each person that died are actually still alive and living under a new name. Then they show their evidence and I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. Sure, these people are similar enough that they could fit a verbal description, but when you actually compare features it’s so easy to see they’re all different people and can’t be the same.

          I know it’s like that with some cops, because I know some people in emergency services that have been taking FR courses. They told me that so many departments (fire, police, 911 dispatch, forensics, etc) are being trained on it. And not for the software, it’s for physically identifying people. With this tech and these false arrests I guess it’s come to light that some people, cops or not, lack the fundamental ability to see minor but critical differences in facial anatomy.

          Ultimately, whatever a computer system says, a person is making the final decision to arrest these people. This is where the issue lies.

          Edit: I guess downvotes mean “I don’t like that you’re right” here also. I worked in the FR field for almost a decade. I’m familiar with the topic.

  • SpeedLimit55@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Interesting article though I would not expect a technology company to have all of the answers. The police are doing the actual work and need to be held accountable.

    • kitonthenet@kbin.social
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      yes, but thorn is lobbying for changes to EU law that would require tech companies there to, among other things, purchase thorn’s product to scan user’s data

    • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      Because it’s a self interested millionaire with a sketchy past, nothing he does is altruism, it’s all PR and self jerking.

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          All you need to do is Google “Ashton Kutcher sketchy past” and you’ll get lots of articles from long before this year, when shit finally hit the fan for him. He’s been a clear fake for a long time.

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          The app is being used by police to persecute sex workers and marks, not to find children who are victims of child sex trafficking - because child sex traffickers are not stupid enough to give their “product” to anyone who would instantly put their faces on the internet for anyone to find.

          Sex trafficking is a serious issue, but Kutcher nor his company has done their due diligence and are actually helping to persecute sex workers.

          I’m not saying that it was intentional, but it does make the whole supposed effort seem like it’s more about optics and marketing.

            • b0rlax@beehaw.org
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              Defending a famous, rich, rape apologist whose organization is doing more for hurting legal sex work than helping solve illegal sex trafficking is kind of mark behavior.

              To me, when a person shows their true colors, I automatically need to assume their past actions had ulterior motives.

            • taanegl@beehaw.org
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              1 year ago

              I just tried to explain what I thought the commenter was saying. He was being glib, and a little derisive. In any case, you play the same game and I can read your frustrations clearly. You justifiably tried to defend your position, but chose the wrong way of doing it.

              I recommend taking a break a few days from comment section, even social media. Just get it out of your head for a while, try to find balance again. Social media can be very provocative and even infuriating at times. But it doesn’t help you to fight passive aggressive statements with aggressive statements.

              In any case, I hope you take care of yourself and that you are well.

    • Black AOC@lemmygrad.ml
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      Iunno, if someone I knew was involved in trafficking-victim advocacy efforts, then turned around and penned a letter in defense of a rapist who caught 30 to life, I’d suddenly be second-guessing said advocate’s bonafides, and double-checking them too. That’s too rowdy a lapse of judgment for me personally to let slide; and all the parasocial weirdos suddenly jumping to Kutcher’s aid when it’s well known he was a 20 year old with a tongue down a 14 year old’s throat on primetime television is equally as sketchy.

      "‘Just trust Ashton Kutcher’ is terrible public policy.”

      • RotaryKeyboard@lemmy.ninja
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        I love how you completely disregard the people who actually work there and the people who actually run Thorn.

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          I don’t address techbro wastemen; and I haven’t been given any reason to believe any of them are worth addressing if they’re still schlepping facial recognition routines that still routinely misidentify Black and brown faces. I love how you completely disregard the weirdos in the room to peddle your wagon-circling crap.

          • RotaryKeyboard@lemmy.ninja
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            Don’t whatabout me. If you’re going to criticize a company because you don’t like the founder, then at least own up to your faulty generalization.

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              debate pervert

              Take this amateur debatebro shit back to reddit, fuckboy. You’re the one who wanted to get huffy with me tryna up some hollywood weirdo who probably has just as many skeletons as Masterson in his closet; I don’t owe you shit

    • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      You think giving surveillance tools to cops helps kids? You think they don’t abuse it? You didn’t read the article so clearly not, but these tools are being used by cops to presecute sex workers and innocent people.

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        Rather than talk about the abuse of power, this article titles itself and spends much of its content hemming and hawing over Ashton Kutcher and the oh dear but what if the actor man you thought was good was not as good as you wanted him to be?

        Puffy predatory crap.

    • fubo@lemmy.world
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      Prediction: It’ll be helping police arrest consensual sex workers at a higher rate than it helps abused children. In jurisdictions where police are paid off by organized crime, it will help organized pimps (who actually do sex trafficking) thwart competition from the consensual market.

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        I’m sure it will. The problem is that instead focusing on that issue, the article is mostly melodramatic bandwagon bullshit.

        The article contains less journalism than it does pearl-clutching and veiled tsks about actors.

        Again, insincere.

        If the article is about the threat of illegitimate police use of a legitimate and useful law enforcement tool saving children, make the article about that, rather than title it with a facetious question tied to the latest media punching bag irrelevant to any meat in the story.

    • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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      And saving kids is great! The problem is basically the epitome of the phrase, “The road to hell is paved with good intentions.”

      On the surface, a false positive identification isn’t that bad. Validate the data and move on. Case closed, right? Not exactly.

      It probably takes time to filter through false positive alerts and maybe some additional investigations are started. The biggest problem is that society naturally follows “guilty until proven innocent”. If someone is caught up in a trafficking case, and they are actually innocent, their career and association with their existing social circles are basically done. That is regardless if they are innocent and that is horrible.

      Also there is persistence of data. Once a person gets associated in these datasets, is probably near impossible to have that data removed. This could look really bad if it is found as part of an unrelated investigation and exposed. I won’t even go into the invasion of privacy issues.

      While it is great to catch actual bad people, possibly destroying the life of another is also bad. I really wish I could say that is a person is actually innocent they have nothing to worry about. That simply doesn’t apply here.

      • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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        Again, if what are you are writing about was the content of the article and how the article was presented, it would it be a good article.

        Instead, it’s some coy vulture shaking their head and demanding everyone stare at the pop culture dunce of the day who has removed himself from spotlight because he knew the vultures were descending.

        You’ve written more relevant content in your post and presented said content more genuinely than this article has done with thousands of words.

      • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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        This bandwagon you’re scrabbling to catch hold of is actually for media gossip, not so much about corruption of authority, but your hyperbolic and irrelevant comment will be tacked on late though it is, to everybody else’s.

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        Is the article about how spotlight doesn’t save children? No. Because it does.

        Is it about the apparently genuine campaign to make some impact on a horrific reality? No.

        Is Kutcher implicated in anything other than a good-faith effort to aid in identifying and fighting against sex trafficking? No.

        He resigned immediately after making a culturally insensitive sentence to avoid vultures, and a vulture is swooping after him to capitalize on his poor judgment.

        • SuddenlyBlowGreen@lemmy.world
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          He resigned immediately after making a culturally insensitive sentence to avoid vultures, and a vulture is swooping after him to capitalize on his poor judgment.

          Okay, let’s not pretend it was a single misinterpreted sentence, and now poor Ashton is unfairly hounded.

          • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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            Please, refocus on what’s important to all of you: the immaterial details of celebrity gossip.