registration number
Thunder-DeID: Accurate and Efficient De-identification Framework for Korean Court Judgments
Hahm, Sungeun, Kim, Heejin, Lee, Gyuseong, Park, Hyunji, Lee, Jaejin
To ensure a balance between open access to justice and personal data protection, the South Korean judiciary mandates the de-identification of court judgments before they can be publicly disclosed. However, the current de-identification process is inadequate for handling court judgments at scale while adhering to strict legal requirements. Additionally, the legal definitions and categorizations of personal identifiers are vague and not well-suited for technical solutions. To tackle these challenges, we propose a de-identification framework called Thunder-DeID, which aligns with relevant laws and practices. Specifically, we (i) construct and release the first Korean legal dataset containing annotated judgments along with corresponding lists of entity mentions, (ii) introduce a systematic categorization of Personally Identifiable Information (PII), and (iii) develop an end-to-end deep neural network (DNN)-based de-identification pipeline. Our experimental results demonstrate that our model achieves state-of-the-art performance in the de-identification of court judgments.
Protect your privacy: A guide to avoiding drone surveillance
The Texas Department of Public Safety say criminal organizations have increasingly turned to using drones to scout out areas for illegal immigration. I share a ton of tips to protect your privacy online. Do this quick 30-second check to keep your Google and Facebook accounts safe if you haven't yet. What about when you leave your home? Just about everywhere you go, you're being watched.
How Artificial Intelligence Is Changing The Odds In Online Casino - AI Summary
It may seem obvious why the online market has such high growth rates, especially considering the events that occurred in the last couple of years and how they pushed people to use the internet for many services, including retail and banking. Similarly, daily and weekly bonuses and promotions have increased registration numbers on online casino sites. So, attributes such as electronic payment options, daily bonuses, and promotions all encourage new and existing players to keep coming back for more. The application of AI in gathering user data on new and returning players has assisted operators and developers in keeping fresh content that maintains relevance while creating targeted marketing campaigns. The bad news for those employees is that they would end up losing work to robots, which means an entire industry would take a hit. It may seem obvious why the online market has such high growth rates, especially considering the events that occurred in the last couple of years and how they pushed people to use the internet for many services, including retail and banking.
Drone owners in the US will soon need external registration numbers on their UAVs
The FAA will require drone operators in the United States to display their registration numbers on the outside of their small UAVs starting on February 25, 2019. The new regulation revises an existing policy that allows drone owners to put a UAV's registration number inside of the device's battery compartment. Drone operators in the US must register their aerial vehicle with the FAA, at which time they're given a registration number. Since launching the registration requirement, the FAA has permitted drone owners to conceal their identifier within an enclosed compartment on the drone, assuming the compartment could be opened without using tools. This permission aimed to'grant flexibility to the diverse types of small unmanned aircraft commercially available.'
Here's How BuzzFeed News Trained A Computer To Search For Hidden Spy Planes
A secret spy plane operated by the US Marshals hunted drug cartel kingpins in Mexico. A military contractor that tracks terrorists in Africa is also flying surveillance aircraft over US cities. In two stories published last week, BuzzFeed News revealed the activities of aircraft that their operators didn't want to discuss. These discoveries came not from tip-offs from anonymous sources, but by training a computer to recognize known spy planes, then setting it loose on large quantities of flight-tracking data compiled by the website Flightradar24. Here's how we did it.
Top manufacturer says drones should transmit identifier for security
WASHINGTON – The world's largest manufacturer of civilian drones is proposing that the craft continually transmit identification information to help government security agencies and law enforcement figure out which might belong to rogue operators. DJI, a Chinese company, said in a paper released Monday that radio transmissions of an identification code, possibly the operator's Federal Aviation Administration's registration number, could help allay security concerns while also protecting the operator's privacy. The paper suggests steps that can be taken to use existing technologies to develop an identification system, and that operators could include more identification information in addition to a number if they wish. Anyone with the proper radio receiver could obtain those transmissions from the drone, but only law enforcement officials or aviation regulators would be able to use that registration number to identify the registered owner. Law enforcement agencies and the U.S. military raised security concerns last year after FAA officials proposed permitting more civilian drone flights over crowds and densely populated areas.
How to regulate Airbnb and 'homesharing'
Here's the short-term rental dilemma: Websites like Airbnb and VRBO have made vacation rentals and house-sharing incredibly popular by making it easier for travelers to find homey, affordable lodgings and for homeowners to earn extra money by renting out all or part of their dwellings. But short-term rentals are not only illegal in Los Angeles' residential communities, they can create nuisances in neighborhoods and take much-needed housing off the market. Cities in the U.S. and abroad have struggled to manage the resulting boom in short-term rentals. Some cities, such as Hermosa Beach and Ojai, have decided to ban short-term vacation rentals (those less than 30 days) altogether. Mayor Eric Garcetti and members of the City Council have rightfully recognized that the "sharing economy" offers real benefits to residents and the city.