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BBC Verify Live: How UK police use live facial recognition and videos show typhoon hitting Taiwan

2 hours ago
BBC Verify Live: How UK police use live facial recognition and videos show typhoon hitting Taiwan
Originally posted by: BBC.com

Source: BBC.com

  • How BBC Verify uses facial recognition tools in our journalismpublished at 14:46 British Summer Time

    Emma Pengelly and Joshua Cheetham
    BBC Verify journalists

    We’re looking at the increasing use by police in England of facial recognition cameras today which is also a technology used by a wide number of news organisations including the BBC.

    Facial recognition works by identifying and measuring key features on a face, like the width of a nose, distance between the eyes and shape of cheek bones. These features are then compared with other faces stored on databases.

    There are several tools – both free and payable – available to the public like Pimeyes and Search4Faces, which we use to help identify people in pictures or videos. We use other services like Amazon Rekognition as well to compare faces and see if they might be the same person.

    When comparing faces, Amazon Rekognition gives a similarity score. Experts say a score of more than 90% suggests a high probability that the two images feature the same person. There’s an example of how we used the technology in this BBC Verify investigation.

    But these facial recognition applications do have limitations. For example, there are concerns over its ability to learn how to correctly identify non-white faces. The lighting, angles and quality of the photos being compared can also affect the results.

    We don’t rely on the tools alone to give us a definitive answer but facial recognition can form part of our wider research.

  • Get involved with BBC Verifypublished at 13:55 British Summer Time

    Rob Corp
    BBC Verify Live editor

    BBC Verify is dedicated to examining the facts and claims behind a story to try to determine whether or not it is true – whether that’s a political statement, a video shared on social media, or images from a war zone.

    And we’re also keen to hear from you – is there something you think we should investigate?

    We’re particularly interested in claims you have heard or seen that maybe don’t seem right.

    Or perhaps you’ve come across something online and want to know if it was created using AI or even a deepfake.

    You can send your suggestions to the team here.

  • Verified videos show Typhoon Podul lashing Taiwan as it heads towards Chinapublished at 12:53 British Summer Time

    Yi Ma
    BBC Verify researcher

    A screenshot from a video showing driving rain and heavy gusts blowing open a garage doorImage source, Threads/@candybiu2023

    Image caption,

    Verified footage shows driving rain and heavy gusts blowing open a garage door in Taitung

    Social media users in Taiwan have been posting footage showing the impact of Typhoon Podul after it made landfall on the island’s east coast.

    The storm has now moved west across Taiwan having recorded gusts of up to 118 mph (191 km/h), according to the country’s Central Weather Administration.

    We have verified a video taken from inside a car showing a large street sign and several motorbikes being blown down.

    By matching building features and road layouts on Google Earth, we’ve confirmed the video was taken in the south-eastern city of Taitung.

    Reverse image searches show that this video has not appeared on social media before today.

    The Taiwanese government said one person is missing and another 33 have been left injured by the storm.

    We’re currently verifying other videos showing damage from the storm and will bring you more here when we have them.

  • Has facial recognition technology been used to catch ticket touts?published at 11:59 British Summer Time

    Anthony Reuben
    BBC Verify senior journalist

    A South Wales Police live facial recognition van with signs identifying it on the side and cameras on the roofImage source, Getty Images

    Home Office Minister Dame Diana Johnson was on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme earlier this morning where she was questioned about the use of facial recognition technology by the police in England and Wales.

    It comes as the UK government plans to expand the deployment of facial recognition vans in England.

    When asked about South Wales Police’s use of the technology to catch ticket touts, Johnson said: “I don’t know whether they’ve used it for ticket touting so I think it’s probably best I don’t comment on that,” and then went on to say: “The public deserve to know what it’s being used for.”

    Back in 2017 the BBC reported that the South Wales force had used live facial recognition at the Champions League Final in Cardiff to try and identify ticket touts.

    We later reported that of the 2,470 potential matches with pictures of criminals thrown up by the system on the day, 2,297 of them were wrong. But South Wales Police said nobody had been wrongly arrested

  • Watch: Fact-checking DC crime claimspublished at 11:21 British Summer Time

    US President Donald Trump claims Washington DC has been “overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals”, but DC Mayor Muriel Bowser says violent crime is “at a 30-year low”.

    BBC Verify Correspondent Nick Beake has been looking into the crime statistics and asking people how safe they feel in their city.

    Media caption,

    Crime in DC: what do the figures say and how safe do people feel?

  • Which police forces use facial recognition?published at 10:49 British Summer Time

    Lucy Gilder
    BBC Verify journalist

    Image source, PA Media

    Ten Live Facial Recognition (LFR) vans will be used by seven police forces in England to help catch serious criminals, the Home Office has announced.

    Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme this morning, Home Office minister Dame Diana Johnson said the technology would be used to identify offenders wanted for serious crimes such as “rape, GBH, robbery, knife crime and domestic abuse”.

    LFR has been used for almost a decade, and we know that at least six forces in England and Wales have deployed the technology:

    • Metropolitan Police
    • South Wales Police
    • Northamptonshire Police
    • Bedfordshire Police
    • Hampshire Police
    • Essex Police

    I’ve contacted each force to ask how often and for what reason this technology has been used. I’ve also asked about how often it’s led to an arrest and whether it’s mistakenly identified suspects.

    There’s already some publicly available data on its use by certain forces. According to figures compiled by a group of London Assembly , externalm, externalembers, external, for example, the Met used LFR 117 times in an eight-month period between between January and August 2024 – up from 32 times in a four-year period between 2020 and 2023.

  • Verifying overnight explosions in southern Gazapublished at 10:30 British Summer Time

    Emma Pengelly and Richard Irvine-Brown
    BBC Verify journalists

    We’ve been verifying a video of two large blasts in southern Gaza that was posted on social media overnight.

    The footage was filmed from the main building at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis with the camera pointing to the east. Two explosions light up the night sky and people can be heard shouting.

    We’ve previously verified videos from this location so confirming where it was filmed was straightforward. The school building in the foreground, the palm tree and pylon can be matched with online mapping so we know the location is accurate.

    By counting the seconds between seeing the blasts and hearing the sound of the explosions we’ve estimated each happened about 1.7km and 1.4km from the hospital respectively.

    From this video alone it’s not possible to say what was targeted or the kind of munition used.

    We’ll continue to monitor the latest material coming out of Gaza and will be updating you throughout the day.

  • Welcome to BBC Verify Livepublished at 09:52 British Summer Time

    Rob Corp
    BBC Verify Live editor

    Good morning.

    We’re here to bring you the latest updates from our team as they fact-check claims and verify video to feed into the BBC’s reporting this Wednesday:

    Right now we’re looking at these stories:

    • We’ve carried out checks on videos posted from the city ofKhan Younis showing two large blasts overnight and we’re also monitoring postsfrom Gaza City as Israeli forces prepare to launch what it says is anoperation to take over the city
    • Facial recognition: Our journalists are gathering available data on how the technology is used by police forces in England and Wales to see how often it’s deployed and for what offences

    Elsewhere, we’re checking data from Nasa satellites that track heat sources on the Earth’s surface to monitor the development and spread of wildfires across Europe.

    We’ll bring you more on those stories throughout the day.

    BBC Verify Live banner

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