Facial recognition stories
Business users get a premium 1kg laptop with all-day battery life, stronger-than-expected graphics and robust security for modern workloads.
Parents are bearing most of the burden, as 78% of under-16s in Australia are still accessing social media covered by the ban.
Frontline staff gain a device that merges recording and live communications, as Hytera targets public safety, retail and healthcare users.
Police and other public safety users in the UK and Europe will get AI-linked command systems that fuse video, maps and dispatch tools.
Business buyers in Australia can now get a 0.99kg 14-inch Copilot+ PC from AUD $3,399, with local AI tools and 26-hour battery life.
The new OMVI range could cut costs for homes and businesses by replacing multi-camera setups with one device that tracks subjects in 360 degrees.
Retailers can now flag shoplifting in live footage within seconds, as the new tool works without model training or data labelling.
Data centre work is set to lift future revenue, with PMT booking three multi-million-dollar security contracts in its strongest month to date.
Public backing is strongest where facial recognition is tied to security, with 81% supporting border checks and 53% favouring tighter limits.
Voluntary model reviews may leave gaps as advanced AI systems move closer to critical infrastructure and enterprise data.
The certification could help governments avoid faulty enrolment hardware that risks undermining digital ID schemes used by more than 100 million people.
Fast-growing digital banks in Asia face tighter checks as varied rules and weak data systems make customer verification harder across borders.
The update should cut manual access approvals and give organisations clearer reporting from their security systems, while improving accessibility.
Recurring payments can now be authorised directly from UK bank accounts, with live use already underway for investing and rent.
Rising theft and abuse in pharmacies is pushing operators towards facial recognition tools that warn staff when known offenders enter stores.
Its latest NIST ranking may bolster bids for government identity contracts, after ROC topped Class B slap fingerprint accuracy and cut error rates.
Canadian businesses will get tougher digital onboarding defences as the phased rollout targets deepfakes, spoofed video and device tampering by Q3 2026.
Familiarity with AI fakery is not improving detection, as a UK survey found Britons struggled to spot manipulated video and stills.
Growing use of AI fakery is forcing companies to verify who is really on screen before hiring, approving payments or granting access.
The hire comes as live facial recognition in British shops faces mounting scrutiny over privacy, accountability and safeguards for shoppers and staff.