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Surveillance company Facewatch is experiencing "exponential" demand for its AI-powered facial recognition system to identify repeat shoplifters, founder Simon Gordon said. The system works by having a store manager review security camera footage after an item is stolen, logging the thief's image into Facewatch's system for future alerts.

Critics say this technology infringes on privacy rights and often makes mistakes. But according to Gordon, the system currently has a 99.85% accuracy rate and data is only stored for two weeks, half the time of traditional security camera footage, reports CNN.

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UN Security Council is set to hold its first formal discussion on artificial intelligence (AI) in New York, with the UK calling for international dialogue on the technology's impact on global peace and security. British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly will chair the meeting, as the UK seeks a leadership role in AI regulation. In June, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres supported the idea of creating an international AI watchdog, similar to the International Atomic Energy Agency.

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Suumit Shah, CEO of Indian enterprise e-commerce platform Dukaan, claims to have laid off 90% of his support team after implementing a presumably GPT-4-based AI chatbot that has reduced customer support costs by about 85%. The chatbot, dubbed Lina, reduced first-response time to instant, cutting resolution times from more than two hours to just over three minutes, Shah said. The AI assistant answered both general and account-specific questions.

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