lukeobrien
lukeobrien
CRITIC
img-contested
N/A
0 reviews
PUBLIC
img-contested
N/A
1 reviews

RECENT ARTICLES

Sort by:
No Rating
Trump's Loudest Anti-Muslim Twitter Troll Is A Shady Vegan Wed To An Ex-WWE Exec

Trump's Loudest Anti-Muslim Twitter Troll Is A Shady Vegan Wed To An Ex-WWE Exec

×U.S. EditionPart of HuffPost Politics. ©2022 BuzzFeed, Inc. All rights reserved.×AdvertisementAdvertisementHer Twitter timeline was one long screed that reflected the collective id of the Make America Great Again movement. Tea party rage, evangelical hokum and white supremacy ― it was all there. In sufficient volume, this kind of hate can now turn any no-account right-winger into a star on social media. And it worked for @AmyMek.AdvertisementMekelburg told Tina Galasso, a now-former friend, that she’d gotten to know Cortez before the murder and spent a lot of time with him. Mekelburg and...

May 31, 2018
Share
Save
Review
No Rating
Far-Right Extremists Helped Create The World's Most Powerful Facial Recognition Technology

Far-Right Extremists Helped Create The World's Most Powerful Facial Recognition Technology

×U.S. EditionPart of HuffPost Politics. ©2022 BuzzFeed, Inc. All rights reserved.×Advanced facial recognition technology poses a mortal threat to privacy. It could grant the government, corporations and even average citizens the ability to capture a photo of anybody and, with a few keystrokes, uncover all kinds of personal details. So when about a shadowy facial recognition firm called Clearview AI in January, it seemed like the worst nightmare of privacy advocates had arrived.AdvertisementWith the coronavirus pandemic increasingly throwing the country into chaos and President moving to...

April 7, 2020
Share
Save
Review
No Rating
Far-Right Extremists Helped Create The World's Most Powerful Facial Recognition Technology

Far-Right Extremists Helped Create The World's Most Powerful Facial Recognition Technology

×U.S. EditionPart of HuffPost Politics. ©2022 BuzzFeed, Inc. All rights reserved.×Advanced facial recognition technology poses a mortal threat to privacy. It could grant the government, corporations and even average citizens the ability to capture a photo of anybody and, with a few keystrokes, uncover all kinds of personal details. So when about a shadowy facial recognition firm called Clearview AI in January, it seemed like the worst nightmare of privacy advocates had arrived.AdvertisementWith the coronavirus pandemic increasingly throwing the country into chaos and President moving to...

April 7, 2020
Share
Save
Review
  • Total 3 items
  • 1
OUTLETS
huffpost.com

huffpost.com

CRITIC
img-trusted
87%
PUBLIC
img-trusted
78%
huffingtonpost.com

huffingtonpost.com

CRITIC
img-contested
N/A
PUBLIC
img-contested
55%