

Arsenal supporter,Right winger/ right back for various teams,Wrestling nerd, Music lover, Journeyman.
Another new A.I. innovation — developed by Robert Beiser, executive director of the anti-trafficking nonprofit Seattle Against Slavery — takes aims at the buyers themselves. The tool works like this: A would-be john texts a girl in an ad, and she responds. They go back and forth about prices, services, fetishes, meeting spot. But as soon as the buyer has made clear he’s willing to pay for sex, he gets a message to the effect of: This could have been a trafficking victim. Law Enforcement now has your information and might follow up with you. Click here for counseling so you can stop doing this.
Even more promising, XIX can also tag objects. Users can ask it to find all photos of a particular girl with a particular guy, or a black pickup truck with a specific license plate, or even words on a T-shirt. “We can go on Instagram and search for photos of cash fanned out on the bed in the background — a pretty strong signal — and even sometimes extract the serial numbers on the bills,” says Emil Mikhailov, founder of the San Francisco-based company XIX.ai that makes the tool.
Another new tool with eagle-eye detection is XIX, which is able to recognize people in blurry photos via mirrors and at different ages. “You can say, ‘Go find this person in an image off a security camera or a side shot of someone off a Facebook page,” says McKinley of DeliverFund.“With other tools we’re often not successful, but with XIX we’re getting 98 to 99% hit rates.”