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It sounded like the purpose is to compare the hash with a DB of hashes of known illegal images. I mean I doubt a court would consider it to be very useful evidence, but it would tell them who to investigate. (regardless of whether that's a good or bad thing ethically)
@twiz Alright so after reading a bit more, my understanding is as follows. There are two completely separate features. (A) ML powered detection of nude images sent and received over iMessage. For users <13, if they choose to send or receive an image containing nudity they will be warned and if they continue their parents will be notified. For users from 13-18, the image will be blurred, no notification will be sent to parents. All is does client side and the image is never sent to anyone.
(B) The CSAM detection for iCloud Photos. This is the main thing people have issue with that only searches for known images using the hash db we were talking about. Long story short, if a certain threshold is reached Apple can decrypt low res versions of the photos for manual analysis and then eventually the images and the user will be reported to gov.
@ballBreaker Meh, I think it's fine for the most part
Oh and apparently you can't delete those images now, which is dumb
So I guess to help parents check once they get notification
@twiz To answer your question. A hash would basically be useless to law enforcement. They have no idea if the ML hash algo fucked up, or what. So I was saying they are prob receiving an image, which it turns out they are. A low res version.
What pisses me off is that I've been asking for years to add duplication detection to Apple Photos. Why couldn't apple take their super cool NueralHash algo and gives us dup detection instead.
@twiz No. they receive the actual image on the users device or in this case icloud photos.
I'm not sure this is exactly a compliment to Apple, but they are probably still far more concerned about privacy than any other company that doesn't specifically exist for privacy purposes.
@Mehdi It's completely different, just shares one peice of technology. The way they would do it is hash every photo client side and just check for dup hashes. There is no privacy concern there. They do that now, just with a shittier hashing algo.
@Mehdi 1. That's not really how Apple's CSAM detection works. 2. The difference is it's never being sent to anyone. No one has a problem with Apple scanning their photos client side. People have an issue that it is being sent to Apple to be decrypted and then to law enfrocement.
Apple already does massive amounts of "scanning" client side (face detection, scene detection, ML powered slidehsows). Nothing leaves the device so people don't care.
It's not a normal hashing algo like SHA256 or MD5. it's a specific ML powered one made for images. Changing a pixel or cropping it will still produce the same hash.
> The main purpose of the hash is to ensure that identical and visually similar images result in the same hash, and images that are different from one another result in different hashes. For example, an image that has been slightly cropped or resized should be considered identical to its original and have the same hash
@twiz With a normal hashing algo the only chance for false positives is collision chance of the hashing algo, it is exponentially higher for an ML powered one
And you don't want someone going to jail (or their life being ruined by a CSAM investigation) because Apples algo made a mistake
or people having a loan refused because the risk score got it wrong for X reasons because it had a bias in a feature (such as gender or skin color or address)
hence some sectors only approve the use of "linear" models, the ones that are easy to explain: "this variable goes up + this other one" => score goes up
saw your notes mehdi, great tips and thanks for the level of detail! Really appreciate that, I was also kind of leaning towards some of those points too but its great ot hear it from someone else
@Mehdi Why are they even using facial recognition for shoplifting cases? It would be one thing if that happened from a murder investigation where they had no idea who the person was, but honestly who even cares if a shoplifter gets caught.
It seems obvious there's going to be a lot of problems if it's used for every person that jaywalks or looks at a cop the wrong way.
Honestly I feel like this is just the result of IT-corporates forcing pseudo-progress no one needs, shoplifting is easily covered by insurances, that's basically bringing a tank to a fist fight
Like lately, release approaching of the next update, a slew of high priority bugs rained on me with very short deadlines. System bugs. I signed to be in Gameplay, but still not back in that team.
I like it, but had to let know projects manager this week that I couldn't possibly do all of that before the next deadline and was gonna cave at that rate.
@Mehdi Exactly. Most of the talk is about racist police, but the entire law-enforcement system in the U.S. is just ridiculous. It's clearly been a lot of decades since anyone has taken a step back and tried to figure out how much of what they do actually benefits society in any way.
I guarantee the police would view that software as a win, because it leads to more arrests. As though, people being in prison is a good thing.
I doubt many cops ever even consider the purpose of their job existing.
@Mehdi Maybe, although I don't think that's the only factor. I mean what would you expect a city to do if crime increases? Hire more cops, right? No actual attempt to solve any real problems.
@twiz yeah, but those are all expenses of the city, so it will be "more cops / more jails spendings in lieu of other investments benefitting the whole city". I think it becomes clear that the solution is to invest in the communities, to provide education and work opportunities to reduce all that spending in the long term
@Nyakouai one thing I learned in the corporate, sometimes/often it helps being pushy and annoying to get things moving
bb talked about this before but want to ask more broadly
Would y'all work for a company that's work you disagreed with? As in, the job itself isn't bad. The work environment, pay and everyone else is fine. Simply what the company does you disagree with.
@JBis You can make it as many times you want. It's the same as people asking "If you are straight, would you do it with someone of the same sex for XXX$?"
imagine thinking: "I despise wars and violence, but my software runs on missiles that kill people, but since I'm paid double the market I'll bury this guilt feeling"
Well, good for you. I worked 1.5 years for a job I did not like (not unethical, just not my thing) and I was that close to a burnout. squish thumb and index together
JBis, nobody will be right in this debate. It's purely a matter of opinion with no factual arguments to back either side up.
I was asked once if I felt guilty for enabling people addiction to videogames. It baffled me for a moment and it took me a long time to find an answer. I don't feel guilty that a small proportion of our user base create problems with our product because of other problems they have. However, I got the occasion to work for a defense company and turned it down. Cause, no matter how you turn it, a missile is made to kill people. Weapons are tools to kill people.
"Yeah, but we need to protect ourselves and dissuade and stuff" No. Dissuasion is only effective if you're ready to use it, ergo, it will kill people at some point.
You mess up? Your missile take a 3 degrees deviation and blow up a family instead of the target.
they usually say: "I just build software, I don't push the button to send it nor do I ask anyone to do it, the military does it", sure, but you built it :)
If you do assign blame (or as you put it "question their ethics") the people writing the software, how abstracted does one have to work before you don't assign blame? Does the physicist who worked on how projectiles fly receive blame? Does the chemist who worked on the explosive part of the missile receive blame? Does the engineer who worked on how to fly a missile receive blame?
I wouldn't consider Newton for coming up with the laws of motion, i would however question the ethics the guy who used them to knowingly to build a missile and especially for commercial purposes
I wouldn't blame the guy that designed a new alloy to make aerocraft more aerodynamic. I WOULD blame the biochemist that designed a new superstrain of a virus if it got out.
@JBis sure for researchers from the past, but from the present not so much, researchers are usually sponsored and financed. so if you're financed by the military, it sure as hell you're not researching the aerodynamics of a supersonic aircraft designed to write "PEACE & LOVE" super fast in the sky ...
@JBis Everybody is basing their research on somebody else research. If you don't, then you just created a new science field, so please publish about it.
hahaha yes, I imagine them saying: "Oh no! you're saying my super corrosive formula that has no industrial use whatsoever has been used in a war, how shocking, I can't believe it, I just came up with that formula for the sake of science"