Categories: Technology

‘Privacy is a myth’: AI for surveillance startup Wobot CPO

Wobot Intelligence Chief Product Officer (CPO) Tanay Dixit talks with The Sociable about privacy in the age of mass surveillance from the Seedstars Summit in Switzerland.

Read More: Over 80 startups will strive for sustainability at Seedstars Summit

Wobot Intelligence helps businesses make sense of CCTV data by implementing a layer of Artificial Intelligence which makes the system capable of doing surveillance on behalf of the human eye.

The Indian startup uses AI in surveillance footage for:

  • Activity Recognition, which is used to deduce human actions in present state, based upon complete action executions, and action prediction to predict human actions in future state based upon incomplete action executions.
  • Facial Recognition, which is a category of biometric software that maps an individual’s facial features mathematically and stores the data as a faceprint. The software uses deep learning algorithms to compare a live capture or digital image to the stored faceprint in order to verify an individual’s identity.
  • Object Detection, which is used to notice or discover the presence of real-world objects within an image or video frame and to be able to tell an object apart from the static background.
  • Posture Detection, which is done by determining three dimensional orientations by tracking the movement and orientation of a body with respect to a custom axes. Its use cases include real-time posture detection (talking on the phone, aggressive behavior, etc.), kinect and 3D camera based body posture detection.

Read More: Shareholders tell Amazon to stop selling Rekognition facial recognition tech to govt

Wobot’s Deep Learning algorithms can detect any deviations in standard operating procedures (SOPs) and automatically list them and make them track able for all relevant stakeholders in the organisation.

Tim Hinchliffe

The Sociable editor Tim Hinchliffe covers tech and society, with perspectives on public and private policies proposed by governments, unelected globalists, think tanks, big tech companies, defense departments, and intelligence agencies. Previously, Tim was a reporter for the Ghanaian Chronicle in West Africa and an editor at Colombia Reports in South America. These days, he is only responsible for articles he writes and publishes in his own name. tim@sociable.co

View Comments

Recent Posts

Genesis Mission to unify US datasets on single platform to feed AI

The road to the Genesis Mission was paved by technocrats like Larry Ellison and Tony…

5 days ago

G20, B20 promote interoperable digital ID, DPI rollouts

DPI means your digital identity will follow you everywhere — everything you do and say…

5 days ago

From the Dot-Com Bust to the Age of AI: Nisum’s 25-Year Playbook for Sustainable Success

Imtiaz Mohammady, founder and CEO of global technology consulting firm Nisum, doesn’t fit the Silicon…

1 week ago

Japan moves to build the first 1-million-qubit quantum computer through new industry partnership

The birth of quantum mechanics was accidental, as most scientific discoveries go. Working from the…

1 week ago

New partnerships accelerate digital health as AI continues to redefine orthopedics

The convergence of AI, specialized software, and clinical expertise is creating a new paradigm in…

2 weeks ago

Deduction Raises $2.8M To Launch “Taylor, CPAI,” an AI Agent Aiming To Fix America’s Tax Bottleneck

The IRS just confirmed that Direct File — the agency’s short-lived attempt to offer a…

2 weeks ago