Skip to main content

AI Bias Analysis

4 models · Takes ~15 seconds

Engadget

Sam Altman's 'human verification' company thinks its eye-scanning orbs could solve ticket scalping

Sam Altman's 'human verification' company thinks its eye-scanning orbs could solve ticket scalping
ShareXFacebook

Sam Altman's cryptocurrency turned identity verification startup Tools for Humanity is offering a new set of perks to people who scan their eyes at one of the company's orbs. Among them, is a new tool called Concert Kit that could help bands and artists fight back against ticket scalping bots.  The new feature relies on the revamped World ID, the orb-based verification system that scans users eyeb

E

Source

Engadget

Read full article at Engadget

Opens original article in a new tab

Advertisement

Related Tech Stories

Should you stare into Sam Altman’s orb before your next date?
The Verge

Should you stare into Sam Altman’s orb before your next date?

Tinder users who prove they're a real person by visiting an identity-verifying orb will soon be able to get five free boosts in the app - and it's just the latest service to embrace the orb. World, which was co-founded by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, initially tested Tinder verification using its facial scanning orbs through a pilot program in Japan last year. It's now expanding the service to "select markets, including Japan and the United States." To verify that they're not a bot or an AI agent, us

Read more →
Anthropic’s new cybersecurity model could get it back in the government’s good graces
The Verge

Anthropic’s new cybersecurity model could get it back in the government’s good graces

The Trump administration has spent nearly two months fighting with AI company Anthropic. It's dubbed the company a "RADICAL LEFT, WOKE COMPANY" full of "Leftwing nut jobs" and a menace to national security. But some of the ice may reportedly be melting between the two, thanks to Anthropic's buzzy new cybersecurity-focused model: Claude Mythos Preview. Anthropic's relationship with the Pentagon soured quickly in late February after the company refused to budge on two red lines: using its technolo

Read more →
Advertisement