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Intel just made a real-time deepfake detector, claims it has whopping 96% accuracy

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Ever wondered how come your favourite celebrities are morphed into another person and made to speak something which they have never really spoken? Well, to combat this Intel has come up with its own product which will detect these fake videos, also called deep faking. The company claims its tech called FakeCatcher will detect fake videos with a 96% accuracy rate and will give results in milliseconds. This detector has been designed by Demir in collaboration with Umur Ciftci from the State University of New York at Binghamton. Wondering how this will happen?


Intel just hit the nitro in the self-driving car race

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Intel is all-in on autonomous cars. The company's autonomous vehicle division, Mobileye, has signed a deal to provide self-driving technology to eight million cars for a "European automaker," Reuters reports, citing a company official. The terms of the deal, and the identity of the automaker in question, have not been disclosed. Mashable reached out to Intel for clarification but did not hear back immediately. The contract's terms will kick in in 2021, when Intel's new EyeQ5 chip, designed to power fully autonomous vehicles (i.e.


Intel just painted a target on IBM Watson's back

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Intel announced late last week that it has formed a new AI group to consolidate a number of its programs and acquisitions. It's headed by Naveen Rao, the former head of Intel acquisition Nervana. This means Intel is making sure is has a major seat at the table as artificial intelligence and machine learning branch out to touch virtually everything -- from autonomous driving to IoT to enhancing corporate systems -- over the next 5-7 years. In the short term, the group will focus on research related to its software and hardware (Nervana, Xeon/Lakecrest chips and subsequent families) to deliver AI for drones and autonomous vehicles, smart cities, health care, personal appliances, etc. But I expect a longer-term play.


Intel just made a big bet on self-driving cars

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You probably haven't heard of Mobileye, but in the past couple of years it has become one of the most important players in the emerging self-driving car industry. And that means Intel's $15 billion acquisition of the company, announced Monday, makes Intel one of the most important tech companies in the car industry. Intel powered the PC revolution by providing the computer chips that allowed PCs to become ever more powerful. Mobileye has positioned itself to do the same for self-driving cars: Currently, conventional car companies put Mobileye sensors, chips, and software into their vehicles in order to give them advanced driver-assistance capabilities. The company says its hardware is already embedded in more than 300 car models from 27 different car companies, and the company is reportedly working with giants such as GM and Volkswagen.