How about just taking a photo with a film camera, or an agreed upon SLR camera where the digital negative is never shared online and paper film hard copies are made instead.
I've said it before, and I'll say it again: we're not many years away from a set of sunglasses with AI, cameras, speakers, mic, etc. all combined. It will initially be used to great benefit for humanity, but will eventually be hacked so that the AI assistant digitally removes the clothing of everyone you see with a fair amount of accuracy.
I imagine my Google glass sending me 8 warning notifications as I look at the personification of Jabba the Hutt. AI equivalent of an angel taking form.
Just look at hololens and magic leap, both the hardware and software. We already have all the components to do what you're talking about just don't have it glued together in that specific way yet
So that links to an NY times article that links to hopefully the original the sun article. That says it's because of cyber bullying.
Is everything OK, why won’t you show up in family photos for the handsome boy that you are anymore?'
"And then the big whopper…. 'Are you being bullied?'
To my surprise he turned to me and laughed saying: 'No, but I will be if you post pictures of me online without my consent!'
"Apparently the teens have group chats of their own and they're very active with school peers on the look out and competing to find and share the most embarrassing family photos of each other so they can ‘roast’ them in the group.
"He went on to explain how the ‘nose cover’ is just a signal to their peers that they won’t be caught ‘slipping’ which we eventually translated to meaning ‘off guard.’
they won’t be caught ‘slipping’ which we eventually translated to meaning ‘off guard.’
Look, I'm mid 30s, and the time that I was with it has long passed (it'll happen to you!), but this is just a really sad way to mock someone's use of language.
They must have been really desperate to make that jab because "slipping up" has been a common phrase for decades (at least in the UK). So the "up" has been dropped and we're left with "slipping", if it takes a native English speaker more than ten seconds to work it out I'd be worried for their cognition.