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Alyssa Milano: Sorry Not Sorry

Who Owns Your Face? AI, Extremism, and Facial Recognition with Kashmir Hill

Alyssa Milano: Sorry Not Sorry

Peace By Peace Productions

Politics, News

3.63.5K Ratings

🗓️ 27 November 2023

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We live in a time where technology is advancing faster than our ability to regulate and culturally adapt to it—and sometimes that results in truly terrifying realities. Our guest this week is Kashmir Hill. Kashmir is a tech reporter at the New York Times. She digs into the intersection of facial recognition, Artificial Intelligence, unfettered capitalism, and privacy rights in her new book Your Face Belongs To Us: A Secretive Startup's Quest to End Privacy as We Know It, which is now available at bookstores everywhere.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, it's Alyssa Malano, and I can't wait for you to read my new book,

0:12.5

Sorry not sorry.

0:13.7

It's a collection of essays where I share my unapologetic thoughts

0:17.8

on life, culture, activism, and motherhood.

0:21.0

You'll learn some things about me that I know you've never heard before

0:24.4

and share in my story as an activist. This book is such a big part of my heart and so are you and

0:30.4

thank you for that. Sorry not sorry is available now, everywhere books are sold. Hi, I'm Melissa Molano, and this is Sorry Not Sorry. sorry. We love. We live in a time where technology is advancing faster than our ability to regulate and culturally adapt to it.

1:22.0

And sometimes that results in truly terrifying realities.

1:27.2

Our guest this week is Kashmir Hill.

1:29.7

Kashmir is a tech reporter at the New York Times. She digs into the intersection of facial recognition, artificial intelligence, unfettered capitalism, and privacy rights in her new book your face belongs to us a secretive

1:46.6

startup's quest to end privacy as we know it. When you are out grocery shopping, you may not realize what is watching you.

1:58.9

Some supermarkets are using facial recognition technology to catch thieves.

2:03.5

The Toronto Police Service has made a disturbing admission.

2:06.4

Officers use secret facial recognition technology from Clearview AI to dig up sensitive

2:12.0

personal information based on nothing more than photos.

2:15.1

You know, there's been a lot of talk about the start of Clearview, you know, in 2020 and

2:20.5

Luke and Brian of having to post posted reported that some of your earliest sort of

2:25.8

of coworkers were you know had these deep longstanding ties to far-right

2:30.9

extremists. I'm just gonna say it right here. Clearview AI is a privacy dumpster

2:36.3

fire in my opinion. This company was found to be providing its tool for facial

2:41.3

recognition to law enforcement agencies and governments

2:44.6

including the FBI and the DHS.

...

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