A University at Buffalo (UB) research team shows that due to microscopic imperfections in the manufacturing process of the smartphones built-in cameras, no two smartphones are identical.
The photos taken with a smartphone contain their camera flaws and the images can be traced back to the smartphone allowing the owner to claim the copyright if the photos are posted in any social media or e-magazine without their consent. The research team will also introduce in February at the 2018 Network and Distributed Systems Security Conference in California a new technology that demonstrates the smartphone built-in camera can be used in the authentication process like PIN numbers or passwords. Read more: www.buffalo.edu/news/releases/2017/12/013.html Until now if you were interested in listening to a podcast or news of some particular topic or speaker, you may Google it and wait for a list of links based on the tags associated to those files. A new search engine developed by AUDIOBURST allows searching for audio clips, podcasts, and news as soon as they are available in the Cloud. An artificial intelligence system “listening to” millions of audio files on the Internet automatically assigns them a tag based on their content, after being “listened to” during a burst (one to three minutes time). Click on search.audioburst.com/ an enter for instance the words: bitcoin Kodak AUDIOBURST will immediately play in sequence the news available online for the subject matter and you may listen to them on your computer or smartphone.
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