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    Microsoft’s emotion recognition is terminated

    Nick HornbyBy Nick HornbyJuly 5, 2022No Comments2 Mins Read
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    Microsoft’s emotion recognition is terminated
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    Have you ever heard of emotion recognition? Microsoft? Azure Face software, which is powered by Artificial intelligence (AI), to learn a person’s feelings from videos and photos. However, the company announced that it will retire this feature. Understand the reasons!

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    Microsoft’s Emotion Recognition

    Activists and academics have raised concerns for years, claiming that facial recognition software that claims to be able to determine a person’s gender, age, and emotional state can be completely biased, unreliable, and invasive — and for that, they shouldn’t be. sold.

    Microsoft’s tool has been criticized for downplaying the importance of “emotion recognition”. According to experts, the facial expressions that the app considers universal varies across populations, so external displays of emotion cannot be equated with deeper feelings.

    Natasha Crampton, director in charge of the AI ​​tool, wrote in a post with a news announcement that experts inside and outside the company noted a lack of scientific consensus regarding the definition of emotions, as well as problems with the spread of findings. .

    Microsoft has already stopped offering emotion recognition features to new customers. However, for those who were already using the service, access must be revoked by June 2023.

    Access to the tool will still be allowed in some cases

    The tool can still be used in some situations. From now on, users will need to sign up to use Azure Face, telling Microsoft how, where and for what the systems will be used.

    This way, the use cases with less harmful potential (like automatically blurring faces in videos and photos, for example) will still be available with the available access.

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    The decision to stop indiscriminate use of the tool is part of a long overhaul of Microsoft’s ethical policies regarding artificial intelligence. In addition, the company intends to restrict access to some other features, as well as completely remove others from its list of applications.

    Nick Hornby

    “Web geek. Wannabe thinker. Reader. Freelance travel evangelist. Pop culture aficionado. Certified music scholar.”

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    Nick Hornby

    "Web geek. Wannabe thinker. Reader. Freelance travel evangelist. Pop culture aficionado. Certified music scholar."

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