Sunday, June 28, 2026
ADVT 
Tech

Facebook Programs Computers To Describe Photos For The Blind

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Apr, 2016 11:33 AM
    MENLO PARK, Calif. — Facebook is training its computers to become seeing-eye guides for blind and visually impaired people as they scroll through the pictures posted on the world's largest online social network.
     
    The feature rolling out Tuesday on Facebook's iPhone app interprets what's in a picture using a form of artificial intelligence that recognizes faces and objects. The iPhone's built-in screen reader, VoiceOver, must be turned on for Facebook's photo descriptions to be read. For now, the feature will only be available in English.
     
    The descriptions initially will be confined to a vocabulary of 100 words in a restriction that will prevent the computer from providing a lot of details. For instance, the automated voice may only tell a user that a photo features three people smiling outdoors without adding that the trio also has drinks in their hands. Or it may say the photo is of pizza without adding that there's pepperoni and olives on top of it.
     
    Facebook is being careful with the technology, called "automatic alternative text," in an attempt to avoid making a mistake that offends its audience. Google learned the risks of technology last year when an image recognition feature in its Photos app labeled a black couple as gorillas, prompting the company to issue an apology.
     
     
    Eventually, though, Facebook hopes to refine the technology so it provides more precise descriptions and even answers questions that a user might pose about a picture.
     
    Facebook also plans to turn on the technology for its Android app and make it available through Web browsers visiting its site.
     
    The Menlo Park, California, company is trying to ensure the world's nearly 300 million blind and visually impaired people remain interested in its social network as a steadily increasing number of photos appear on its service. On an average day, Facebook says more than 2 billion photos are posted on its social network and other apps that it owns, a list that includes Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp.
     
    Until now, people relying on screen readers on Facebook would only hear that a person had shared a photo without any elaboration.
     
    The vocabulary of Facebook's photo-recognition program includes "car," ''sky," ''dessert," ''baby," ''shoes," and, of course, "selfie."

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Here's an iPhone app that paints your photos into masterpieces

    Here's an iPhone app that paints your photos into masterpieces
    The app now simulates the spreading and bleeding of the pigment onto the canvas - with dedicated properties for the virtual paper, the pigment, the brushes, the water and so on

    Here's an iPhone app that paints your photos into masterpieces

    3D-printed replica for a safe liver transplant created

    3D-printed replica for a safe liver transplant created
    The 3D-printed liver replicas, made of transparent material threaded with coloured arteries and veins, could help surgeons prevent complications while performing liver transplants or removing tumours, a path-breaking research shows.

    3D-printed replica for a safe liver transplant created

    First Look: World's first winemaker machine for your kitchen!

    First Look: World's first winemaker machine for your kitchen!
    Three cheers for wine lovers out there. Here comes a new machine that can turn water, grape concentrate, yeast and a finishing powder into wine in your kitchen in flat three days.

    First Look: World's first winemaker machine for your kitchen!

    Who is smarter, man or woman? It's just a brain, stupid!

    Who is smarter, man or woman? It's just a brain, stupid!
    The big debate about who is smarter, man or woman, has now been laid to rest. There is nothing like a boy's or a girl's brain, and no scientific evidence to prove that they are wired differently, according to an expert.

    Who is smarter, man or woman? It's just a brain, stupid!

    Samsung wearable device to turn hands into keyboard

    Samsung wearable device to turn hands into keyboard
    As the race for wearable computer devices heats up with the entry of Google Glass, a report suggests that Samsung is also working on a wearable device that can turn hands into a virtual keyboard.

    Samsung wearable device to turn hands into keyboard

    Indian-origin engineers create device for faster wireless technology

    Indian-origin engineers create device for faster wireless technology
    Using an inexpensive Rs.3,600 inkjet printer, two Indian-origin electrical engineers at the University of Utah have for the first time produced microscopic structures that use light in metals to carry information

    Indian-origin engineers create device for faster wireless technology