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Monday, April 18, 2011

Brazilian Cops Spot Bad Guys in a Crowd Using Cyborg-Style Shades

Brazilian Cops Spot Bad Guys in a Crowd Using Cyborg-Style Shades

 

Brazil's police are getting augmented reality glasses that use a small camera to identify criminals in a crowd.Photo: Flickr user Marcus Vegas

The Brazilian police force is getting a little bit Terminator on its citizens. Well, on its criminals at least.

No, they haven’t built a humanoid killer, they’ve just taken a cue from the augmented, analytical sight capabilities of cinema cyborgs. In the next few weeks, Brazilian police will begin testing pairs of “RoboCop” glasses, which can identify a criminal’s face in a crowd of people.

“To the naked eye, two people may appear identical,” says Major Leandro Pavani Agostini, chief of military police in Sao Paolo. But these powerful shades can scan up to 400 faces per second, up to 50 yards away, using 46,000 biometric points to identify an individual and ensure a correct match.

Faces are scanned with a tiny camera in the glasses then checked against a database of known criminals. A red light pops up if a perpetrator is found, and the cop can apprehend them without the need for questioning or requesting documents.

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