After the Hamas attack of Oct. 7 triggered Israel's invasion of the Gaza Strip, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians began fleeing from the North of Gaza to the South. As they fled, many Palestinians reported passing through checkpoints with cameras. Israel had previously used facial recognition software in the West Bank, and some Palestinians reached out to The New York Times reporter
Sheera Frenkel to investigate whether the same was happening in Gaza.
Science correspondent
Geoff Brumfiel talks to Frenkel about how Israel launched this facial recognition system in Gaza late last year with the help of private companies and Google photos.
Read Frenkel's full article.Want to hear us cover more stories about AI? Email us at [email protected]. Learn more about sponsor message choices:
podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy