Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

New app to spot fake designer clothes

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Nov, 2014 10:44 AM
    A Japanese company, NEC Corporation, has come up with a smartphone app to spot knock-offs with a single close-up picture.
     
    Aimed at retailers more than individual shoppers, the NEC application will have pictures of products in its database taken with a special magnifying lens, the Wall Street Journal reported.
     
    The patterns will then be used by shops to verify factory received products using smartphone pictures taken with a special lens.
     
    Since branded luxury goods like handbags and wallets have a unique surface pattern, like a fingerprint, NEC's new pattern recognition system can spot fakes, making it easy enough for anyone to utilise it.
     
    Several companies have expressed an interest in the service which is to be formally launched after April next year, according to NEC.
     
    Ultimately, the system will allow merchants to completely remove product ID tags and plastic strings that are pierced through expensive items. This, NEC hopes, will lower costs and ensure even a small hole does not mar pricey designer goods.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    No child's play: Online bullying a growing worry

    No child's play: Online bullying a growing worry
    Exposure to the cyber world may have helped children expand their mental horizons but it has many downsides, the latest being cyber bullying....

    No child's play: Online bullying a growing worry

    New genetic basis for sex determination discovered

    New genetic basis for sex determination discovered
    Not just the X and Y chromosome but a subset of very small genes also play a key role in differentiating male and female tissues in the fruit fly, researchers reported...

    New genetic basis for sex determination discovered

    App turns smartphone into spy gadget

    App turns smartphone into spy gadget
    Researchers from Stanford University with Israeli defence firm Rafael have developed an Android app called Gyrophone that picks up...

    App turns smartphone into spy gadget

    Now, self organising 'smart' robots

    Now, self organising 'smart' robots
    Scientists have created a swarm of over 1,000 coin-sized robots that can assemble themselves into two-dimensional (2D) shapes by communicating with their neighbours....

    Now, self organising 'smart' robots

    Google Confirms: The Global Internet Is Being Attacked by Sharks

    Google Confirms: The Global Internet Is Being Attacked by Sharks
    The company has invested in two major undersea cables connecting the western US to Asia, and a third cable that extends Google's network within Asia.

    Google Confirms: The Global Internet Is Being Attacked by Sharks

    World's first smartphone turns 20 Saturday

    World's first smartphone turns 20 Saturday
    The first ever smartphone - a $900 clunky IBM Simon mobile phone - has turned 20 Saturday.

    World's first smartphone turns 20 Saturday