The Valencian Community has an “anti-AI” plan so that no one cheats on competitive exams

Much of the success of AI glasseslike the Ray-Ban Metait is precisely that they do not look like a technological device. They look like normal glasses that integrate perfectly into our look. AND that is exactly the problem. There is the issue of recording people without their consent and also using them to cheat on exams. It is precisely what the Generalitat Valenciana wants to avoid. The plan. They count in Lift EMV that the Public Function area of ​​the Ministry of Finance has set its sights on AI glasses, and has already detailed a plan against their use in competitive examinations. The plan is to carry out a physical inspection upon entering the exam that verifies “the absence of electronic components.” To do this, they will provide training to supervisory personnel so that they are able to detect these devices, which, as happens with glasses, go very unnoticed. You will have to look for frames that are thicker than normal and lights that activate when recording. There is more. In addition to the physical inspection, an even more effective option is also being considered: installing frequency inhibitors. With this, if a security guard loses smart glasses or a watch, they should be useless as long as they remain in the range of action. They also highlight that for some time now they have been including complex questions whose answers require analysis and critical thinking, so that AI cannot answer them so easily. The new ‘chop’. Gone are the times when we kept a piece of paper with the lesson up our sleeve, now it is copied with AI glasses and smartwatch. This is what an applicant did in the MIR exam this year in Santiago de Compostela. It has not been revealed what model of glasses and watch he was wearing, nor how he planned to use them, but everything indicates that he read the questions with the glasses and got the answer on the watch. A seamless plan, except that someone noticed and got caught. His grade was a zero. AI so you don’t copy. Paradoxically, there are universities that use AI for precisely the opposite purpose: to prevent students from copying. We recently talked about the VIU, also in Valencia, and how thanks to AI and facial recognition they could control exams remotely. A very complex system that It has cost the university 650,000 euros for violating the General Data Protection Regulation. The problem with AI glasses. That someone can cheat on an exam is wrong, but there are things that are even worse. For example, in Spain we have the case of man who was arrested for recording women without their consent with the Ray-Ban Meta. They have also been made modifications in glasses that allow strangers to be identified on the street and there are more and more places where its use is being restricted. Wearing AI in your eyes can be very useful, but anyone you pass on the street could be recording you is intrusive, and even more so if the person wearing them is in, for example, a gym locker room. Or if it is the person who has to shave your crotch. Even if the LED indicator is off, I don’t think anyone could shake the feeling of being recorded. Image | Xataka, Unsplash In Xataka | When you put on your new Meta glasses something else happens: everything you record is recorded in Kenya to train the AI

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