From now on,Big Dick | Adult Movies Online Uber drivers will start their shifts with selfies.
The ride-hailing company is expanding its Real-Time ID Check feature across the US, it announced in a blog post Friday. Drivers submit a selfie through the app to ensure the person driving the car matches Uber's account on file.
The feature doesn't connect to a background check or do anything else to ensure the underlying safety of Uber drivers. Instead, it just checks that the person in the car is the same one Uber has on file.
Drivers will be asked periodically to submit selfies before accepting rides, Uber said. The company uses Microsoft's Cognitive Services API to compare the photo to one it has. If the photos don't match, a driver's account will be temporarily blocked.
Similar facial recognition technology is used by other companies, often in place of a password to identify consumers.
Uber has used the technology through a pilot program for the past few months, the company said. The main problem throughout that pilot was unclear photos or bad lighting.
Uber says it is also using GPS technology to detect dangerous driving, among other safety and security initiatives.
Topics Microsoft Uber
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Volvo will be able to watch you drive and pull over if you seem distracted
Internet providers block sites that host Christchurch terror attack video
The Yoko Ono joke from 'The Simpsons' is now a real thing
The race to preserve (almost) everything on Google+ before it shuts down
Mike Pence's plane skids off a runway, and everyone makes the same joke
New Zealand's silver fern redrawn as Muslims praying gets plenty of online attention
South Asians tell their families not to vote for Donald Trump
Conspiracies, War, and Democrats
The 5 most obnoxious things from Devin Nunes's lawsuit against Twitter
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。