The result has been a proliferation of AI products and services in China, from facial recognition-based payment systems to automated surveillance and even AI-animated state media news anchors. Chinese consumers mostly see these technologies as novel and futuristic, despite concerns raised by some over more invasive applications.
At a recent visit to its Beijing offices, some staff were labeling images of sleepy people that will be used by an autonomous driving project to identify drivers who might be falling asleep at the wheel. A Princeton University project related to autonomous driving initially put a task on Amazon’s Mechanical Turk but as the task became more complicated, people began making mistakes and BasicFinder was brought in to help correct the results, said Du.
Labellers at Qianji make roughly 100 yuan a day marking data points on photographs of people, surveillance footage and street images.
At least the AI developers here are honest about what they are doing, Facebook Zuckerberg is not. illuminarts1972 truthout commondreams billm9 MaineSocialist sarahrunge AnnieMLeonard cmkshama MarkKalafatas NoFascistLies melodijoy
Selling your identity for a kettle. Hmmm I don't know about that....
So scary 😞