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AVATAR Security Kiosk Can Spot Dodgy People

In the future you may have to convince a computer that you are telling the truth at airport security checkpoints. A robotic kiosk will ask travellers a series of questions and report those who pose a potential security risk to human authorities for further investigation. The virtual border agent can detect changes in physiology and behaviour during interviews with travellers. The system is called AVATAR and is currently being tested in U.S. and Canada. An SDSU professor is developing a robotic kiosk that could help detect travelers with sinister intentions.

Apple To Cut iPhone Production By 10% In The First Quarter Of 2017: Nikkei

Apple To Cut iPhone Production By 10% In The First Quarter Of 2017: Nikkei

If there is one company that wishes 2016 could be as quickly as possible put away in the history books, it was Apple: with the Apple watch now a confirmed dud, the iPhone 7 a bust relative to Apple's other offerings, demand for Apple's once brilliant creations waning, and the first recorded declines in both iPhone sales and earnings, 2016 was a year Tim Cook would love to never repeat. Alas, according to Japan's Nikkei, 2017 is set to begin with a whimper, not a bang, as Apple will trim production of its iPhones by at least 10% in the first quarter of 2017.

The Walls Have Ears: Warrant Granted For Amazon Echo Home Data, Setting Precedent

Submitted by Alice Salles via TheAntiMedia.org,

Technology has, for the better part of the last decade, changed our lives in significant and groundbreaking ways. But as technology continues to make great strides, helping us change the way we do business and live our lives, it is also employed by bureaucrats looking to keep an eye on everyone.

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