FB pixel

Loose lips, indeed. AI system hears when people only mouth words

Loose lips, indeed. AI system hears when people only mouth words
 

Lip reading, a dreamed-of utility feature for uncounted AI use cases, appears near commercial availability. The news buoys the hopes of some and causes concern in others.

An Irish startup, Liopa, is trialing a phone application that reportedly can interpret simple phrases mouthed by people. The underlying algorithms do not require audio to be trained, which should streamline product development, market introduction and customer training.

In a Liopa marketing video, a young man who is unable to speak mouths short sentences looking into a phone camera, and pauses. The Speech Recognition App for the Voice Impaired, or Sravi, offers three guesses about what the person is trying to say.

Confirming with the subject and choosing an option on a phone screen trains Sravi on how that particular person silently forms words.

According to an article in Vice, the app might end up being the first such app that anyone could buy.

The same technology by Liopa has been researched as a tool to spot the liveness of a person. In February 2019, a Chinese research team not affiliated with Liopa, claimed its LipPass used closeups on mouths for biometric identification verification. It reportedly found spoofers 93 percent of the time.

Liopa is running out of time to meet its goal to launch commercially in the second quarter of this year. That, in turn, hints at delays in the company’s plan to support multiple languages by the end of the third quarter.

Company executives lean heavily into the heartstring-tugging med-tech opportunities — including aiding COVID patients on assisted breathing. Others who have spent a year in lockdown might welcome being able to read what was said unintentionally on mute during a video meeting.

But the real opportunity for Liopa and those to follow will be law enforcement, espionage, warfare and surveillance marketing — not necessarily in that order.

Sravi is yet another example of a biometrics tool that could pull anonymity from people in public and privacy from everyone else. In fact, executives spotlight the app’s reported ability to automatically monitor silent CCTV footage looking for pre-set words.

And the UK’s Defence and Security Accelerator is funding phase 2 of a project involving Sravi designed to understand how and why individuals, groups and large populations act as they do. The goal would be to train models to spot multiple aspects of behavior that lead to favorable or unwanted outcomes.

Article Topics

 |   |   |   |   |   |   | 

Latest Biometrics News

 

WTTC puts biometrics, digital identity at center of travel agenda

The World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC) has laid out eight strategic priorities to guide its decision making for the…

 

Humanity Protocol key storage error, malware infection lead to massive token breach

There is no indication that the palm biometrics “Proof-of-Trust” nee “Proof-of-Humanity” startup Humanity Protocol uses for identity verification have failed….

 

Digital trust under threat from advanced fraud, AI agents: BioCatch

The digital world has consumed us; “being online” is no longer optional. As such, the importance of digital trust has…

 

Ireland body camera bill prompts debate over use of recorded footage

Gardaí are preparing a €150 million nationwide rollout of body-worn cameras as the use of biometric data in day-to-day policing…

 

Wrongful arrest based on false FRT match sparks lawsuit from Florida man

Another case of wrongful arrest after a false match by facial recognition software has given more ammo to those fighting…

 

Report finds synthetic identity fraud becoming biggest fraud threat in 2026

Synthetic identity fraud is fast becoming one of the biggest threats facing financial institutions, according to new research from Mitek…

Comments

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Biometric Market Analysis and Buyer's Guides

Most Viewed This Week

Featured Company

Biometrics Insight, Opinion

Digital ID In-Depth

Biometrics White Papers

Biometrics Events