• All Of London Facial Recognition By Christmas

    From User 7of9@nobody@none.invalid to alt.privacy.anon-server, misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Fri Jul 3 19:20:21 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    People in London will all be in one big jail!

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/j_haVCMrX4U

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Chris in Makati@mail@nospam.com to alt.privacy.anon-server,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Fri Jul 3 21:53:25 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    On Fri, 03 Jul 2026 19:20:21 +0000, User 7of9 <nobody@none.invalid>
    wrote:

    People in London will all be in one big jail!

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/j_haVCMrX4U


    Good. Slam the crooks up one big jail and throw away the key.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From User 7of9@nobody@none.invalid to alt.privacy.anon-server, misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Fri Jul 3 22:09:53 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    On Fri, 03 Jul 2026 21:53:25 +0100 Chris in Makati <mail@nospam.com> wrote:


    Good. Slam the crooks up one big jail and throw away the key.


    Coming to your town/city soon! lol

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul@nospam@needed.invalid to misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jul 4 00:05:19 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    On Fri, 7/3/2026 6:09 PM, User 7of9 wrote:
    On Fri, 03 Jul 2026 21:53:25 +0100 Chris in Makati <mail@nospam.com> wrote:


    Good. Slam the crooks up one big jail and throw away the key.


    Coming to your town/city soon! lol

    Shocking.

    As long as they provide prints suitable for framing,
    it sounds like a good deal.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clearview_AI

    "In March of 2026, national news outlets reported that the Fargo,
    North Dakota police department had falsely arrested, and had extradited
    from her home state, a Tennessee woman on charges of using a fake
    military ID to commit bank fraud. The evidence used for the
    false arrest was a facial recognition match from Clearview AI
    software. This was despite the fact that the woman had never
    visited North Dakota before and exculpatory evidence existed
    showing the woman was shopping in Tennessee at the time the
    fraud was committed."

    "Indiana wants me, but I can't go back there..."

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZL_tZxyBDo

    The surveillance state already exists -- that's why your sweet
    fine face is already in that database.

    Paul
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Mr. Man-wai Chang@toylet.toylet@gmail.com to alt.privacy.anon-server,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jul 4 13:10:21 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    On 7/4/2026 3:20 AM, User 7of9 wrote:
    People in London will all be in one big jail!

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/j_haVCMrX4U


    Please go alt.conspiracy !! Your video
    and message are both irrelevant to

    alt.comp.os.windows-11
    alt.comp.os.windows-10
    alt.comp.freeware
    misc.phone.mobile.iphone


    I dunno alt.privacy.anon-server!!
    Is it just a junk yard like
    alt.dev.null
    and
    comp.lang.literate
    ??
    --

    @~@ Simplicity is Beauty! Remain silent! Drink, Blink, Stretch!
    / v \ May the Force and farces be with you! Live long and prosper!!
    /( _ )\ https://sites.google.com/site/changmw/
    ^ ^ https://github.com/changmw/changmw
    The game is afoot... Meow...
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Philip Herlihy@nothing@invalid.com to alt.privacy.anon-server,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jul 4 12:13:01 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    In article <20260703192021.83cab79890ea2e7e2e7949c1@dizum.com>, nobody@none.invalid says...

    People in London will all be in one big jail!

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/j_haVCMrX4U

    This is something I know about, as I work closely with our local police
    in North East London.

    Yes, it's reasonable to have some concerns about a technology like this.
    The sort of society we want won't be tracking ordinary citizens as they
    go about their daily lives. But we do want to stop criminals messing up
    those daily lives.

    The key distinction between "Big Brother State" and "reasonable
    vigilance" is the issue of how you get on a 'watchlist'. If the cameras
    are 'harvesting' images and saving them, that would go beyond what the
    vast majority of British people would want, or tolerate. But that's not what's happening here.

    The cameras do recognise what appear to be faces, capture images of them
    (most likely in RAM rather than persistant storage) and scan them
    against a pre-existing watchlist, which will have images of people
    already wanted (e.g. people wanted for recall to prison for breaching
    license conditions).

    If a match is suggested, the image captured is then stored, and sent
    with the watchlist image it potentially matches, to a nearby police
    officer. If he/she is satisfied there's a likely match, he/she will
    speak to the individual concerned to establish identity, using existing
    legal powers to "stop and account". The system plays no further part in
    this.

    If a match is not found, or is rejected by the officer, it is discarded
    and deleted if it has been temporarily stored - it is of no use to the
    police at this point. I'm not sure if images which generate verified
    matches are stored - but once an officer has verified identity they
    aren't likely to be of any significance (I'll ask one day!). Compare
    that with routine CCTV, where your image may be stored for days, weeks
    or years.

    The system works well, and usually generates a number of arrests of
    people who are will necessarily be already wanted - or their image would
    not be in the watchlist.

    The systems are made very conspicuous, with signs on nearby streets
    warning of their (temporary) presence - personally I think that's
    unnecessary.

    The system is functionally equivalent to a police officer happening to recognise someone from a mugshot seen inside the police station - no
    more,no less.

    Now I'm sure Joe Conspiracy will be on here mumbling something about how
    the vaccinations turn us all into transgender as soon as the 5g is
    switched on, but those of less febrile disposition can learn more about
    the system here:

    https://www.met.police.uk/police-forces/metropolitan-police/areas/about- us/about-the-met/facial-recognition-technology/

    For reference, I chair a local panel representing the views of residents
    to the Metropolitan Police, and have done for the last 25 years. It's
    right to ask searching questions about things like this, but it's also
    right to listen to the answers.
    --
    --
    Phil, London
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Kerr-Mudd, John@admin@127.0.0.1 to alt.privacy.anon-server,misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jul 4 16:24:26 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    On Sat, 4 Jul 2026 12:13:01 +0100
    Philip Herlihy <nothing@invalid.com> wrote:

    In article <20260703192021.83cab79890ea2e7e2e7949c1@dizum.com>, nobody@none.invalid says...

    People in London will all be in one big jail!

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/j_haVCMrX4U


    [Sensible reply omitted]


    note the xposts that came from a throwaway dizum account with a bare
    youtube link.

    fu to the privacy ng only
    --
    Bah, and indeed Humbug.
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Fritz Wuehler@fritz@spamexpire-202607.rodent.frell.theremailer.net to misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jul 4 18:46:29 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    In article <20260704162426.72e7c316e0cf355dd4621797@127.0.0.1>
    "Kerr-Mudd, John" <admin@127.0.0.1> wrote:

    On Sat, 4 Jul 2026 12:13:01 +0100
    Philip Herlihy <nothing@invalid.com> wrote:

    In article <20260703192021.83cab79890ea2e7e2e7949c1@dizum.com>, nobody@none.invalid says...

    People in London will all be in one big jail!

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/j_haVCMrX4U


    [Sensible reply omitted]


    note the xposts that came from a throwaway dizum account with a bare
    youtube link.

    fu to the privacy ng only


    Yawn.

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From s|b@me@privacy.invalid to alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sat Jul 4 22:14:36 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    On Fri, 03 Jul 2026 19:20:21 +0000, User 7of9 wrote:

    Newsgroups: alt.privacy.anon-server, misc.phone.mobile.iphone,
    alt.comp.os.windows-11

    They're running it on their iPhone?
    --
    s|b
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Chris@ithinkiam@gmail.com to misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.privacy.anon-server,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sun Jul 5 09:01:37 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    Philip Herlihy <nothing@invalid.com> wrote:
    In article <20260703192021.83cab79890ea2e7e2e7949c1@dizum.com>, nobody@none.invalid says...

    People in London will all be in one big jail!

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/j_haVCMrX4U

    This is something I know about, as I work closely with our local police
    in North East London.

    Yes, it's reasonable to have some concerns about a technology like this. The sort of society we want won't be tracking ordinary citizens as they
    go about their daily lives. But we do want to stop criminals messing up those daily lives.

    The key distinction between "Big Brother State" and "reasonable
    vigilance" is the issue of how you get on a 'watchlist'. If the cameras
    are 'harvesting' images and saving them, that would go beyond what the
    vast majority of British people would want, or tolerate. But that's not what's happening here.

    The cameras do recognise what appear to be faces, capture images of them (most likely in RAM rather than persistant storage) and scan them
    against a pre-existing watchlist, which will have images of people
    already wanted (e.g. people wanted for recall to prison for breaching license conditions).

    If a match is suggested, the image captured is then stored, and sent
    with the watchlist image it potentially matches, to a nearby police
    officer. If he/she is satisfied there's a likely match, he/she will
    speak to the individual concerned to establish identity, using existing legal powers to "stop and account". The system plays no further part in this.

    If a match is not found, or is rejected by the officer, it is discarded
    and deleted if it has been temporarily stored - it is of no use to the police at this point. I'm not sure if images which generate verified matches are stored - but once an officer has verified identity they
    aren't likely to be of any significance (I'll ask one day!). Compare
    that with routine CCTV, where your image may be stored for days, weeks
    or years.

    The system works well, and usually generates a number of arrests of
    people who are will necessarily be already wanted - or their image would
    not be in the watchlist.

    Does it work well, though? As far as I an aware, no scientific studies have been done on the actual system using real-world scenarios. The underlying technology does work under controlled conditions, but we do know it is very susceptible to bias - both positive and negative - that exists in training data.

    This also ignores the growing "blind spot" that any automated system makes
    and AI exacerbates. These systems are designed to find those the police are aware about and unintentionally, but exaggerate, hiding those they aren't.

    Given we know that the Met is "institutionally racist" you can guarantee
    that the system will be very accurate at matching black and asian persons
    of interest whilst also making many false positives. This is because that population are much more likely to end up in databases. White POIs will be
    able to fly under the radar.

    The systems are made very conspicuous, with signs on nearby streets
    warning of their (temporary) presence - personally I think that's unnecessary.

    All it does is encourage youths in hoodies and balaclavas. Reducing effectiveness of policing in the long term.

    The system is functionally equivalent to a police officer happening to recognise someone from a mugshot seen inside the police station - no
    more,no less.

    Which we know that is very, very bad. Bundling that into AI continues the badness.

    Now I'm sure Joe Conspiracy will be on here mumbling something about how
    the vaccinations turn us all into transgender as soon as the 5g is
    switched on,

    Now let's not conflate genuine and well-reasoned concern with crackpot conspiracy theories. They are far from equivalent. Dismissing both on the
    same terms is disingenuous.

    but those of less febrile disposition can learn more about
    the system here:

    https://www.met.police.uk/police-forces/metropolitan-police/areas/about- us/about-the-met/facial-recognition-technology/

    For reference, I chair a local panel representing the views of residents
    to the Metropolitan Police, and have done for the last 25 years. It's
    right to ask searching questions about things like this, but it's also
    right to listen to the answers.

    When the answers are dismissive and don't actually address the questions
    isa good reason why they aren't going away.

    Being a chair representing the public for *25 years* sounds like you're institutionalised and you're less a member of the public then a member of
    the police. Your comment regarding signage being unnecessary points to
    this.




    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Philip Herlihy@nothing@invalid.com to misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.privacy.anon-server,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sun Jul 5 15:08:50 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    In article <112d6hh$ullg$1@dont-email.me>, ithinkiam@gmail.com says...


    Being a chair representing the public for *25 years* sounds like you're >institutionalised and you're less a member of the public then a member of
    the police. Your comment regarding signage being unnecessary points to
    this.


    My role is two-fold. Firstly (and foremost) I have to facilitate
    questions and challenges from the local community to the police.
    Secondly, given the widespread lack of understanding of how the police operates (something you've demonstrated above) it's also useful if I communicate what I've learned back into the community.

    The relationship between the police (most police, most places) and
    ethnic and other minorities is an unsolved problem. In London, Stop and Search (and yes, I've been stopped and searched) focuses particularly on
    knife crime, and it's young black men who are overwhelmingly the most
    likely victims of knife crime. Generations of black people have grown
    up with a not-unreasonable distrust of the police, and reforms in the
    police have happened a lot faster than changes in that distrust. An
    Inspector told me that he has real trouble getting younger recruits to
    carry out the stops that they need to be doing because they don't want
    to be thought racist. Meanwhile young black men continue to be affected disproportinately by knife crime. Some believe that these people arm themselves because they don't trust the police to protect them - which
    becomes a vicious circle.

    I can't say whether there is any bias in the processes which lead to
    someone's likeness being entered into a watchlist, but the Guardian
    reported this:

    "and it was ?statistically significantly more likely to correctly
    identify black participants than participants from other ethnic groups?. https://www.theguardian.com/technology/ng-interactive/2026/may/03/how- does-live-facial-recognition-work-and-how-many-uk-police-forces-use-it

    If you'e so interested in what the police is doing, and you live in
    London (presumably there are similar options in other UK regions) then
    find out about your local ward panel (via the Met website). Go and ask
    all the searching questions you like. You might learn something - and
    you might also find your local team open to ideas.

    For non-UK folk, the UK has a singular model of "policing by consent".
    In the UK, the police are not agencies of government but an independent service expected to uphold the law. In London the Met is supervised by
    the (London) Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime, led by a Deputy
    Mayor with that portfolio title. The Commissioner is also accoountable
    to the Home Secretary, but both are answerable to the courts. Police
    officers are civilians in that they are non-military, overwhelmingly
    unarmed, and the titles of ranks (other than Sergeant) were consciously
    chosen to be non-military.

    While there are inevitably "ripples" in crime, the overwhelming trend
    over decades has been for crime of all kinds (except fraud) to decline
    over time. If you doubt this, as any major AI research tool a relevant question.

    Can we get back to Windows 11 now?
    --
    --
    Phil, London
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From User 7of9@nobody@none.invalid to alt.privacy.anon-server, misc.phone.mobile.iphone,alt.comp.os.windows-11 on Sun Jul 5 17:51:37 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11

    Philip Herlihy <nothing@invalid.com> wrote:

    My role is two-fold.


    Yes.

    No. 1 Do as you're told.

    No. 2 Keep licking boots.

    You have no brain and can't think for yourself.

    This is not about watching people, it's conditioning and staying in control.

    By Christmas...

    London = Beijing!

    FACT!!!

    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Mr. Man-wai Chang@toylet.toylet@gmail.com to alt.comp.os.windows-11,alt.privacy.anon-server,misc.phone.mobile.iphone on Mon Jul 6 09:54:27 2026
    From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11


    Is there an Usenet newsgroup for image recognition?

    Both hardware and software? Or split into 2 to avoid
    cross-posting, which attracts trolling and quarrels?

    QUARREL中文(繁體)翻譯:劍橋詞典 <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/zht/%E8%A9%9E%E5%85%B8/%E8%8B%B1%E8%AA%9E-%E6%BC%A2%E8%AA%9E-%E7%B9%81%E9%AB%94/quarrel>

    TROLLING中文(繁體)翻譯:劍橋詞典 <https://dictionary.cambridge.org/zht/%E8%A9%9E%E5%85%B8/%E8%8B%B1%E8%AA%9E-%E6%BC%A2%E8%AA%9E-%E7%B9%81%E9%AB%94/trolling>

    On 7/4/2026 3:20 AM, User 7of9 wrote:
    People in London will all be in one big jail!

    https://www.youtube.com/shorts/j_haVCMrX4U

    --

    @~@ Simplicity is Beauty! Remain silent! Drink, Blink, Stretch!
    / v \ May the Force and farces be with you! Live long and prosper!!
    /( _ )\ https://sites.google.com/site/changmw/
    ^ ^ https://github.com/changmw/changmw
    The game is afoot... Meow...
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2