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Finding Nemo: Scientists Use AI To Catch Illegal Marine Wildlife Traffickers

FORBES·2h ago·3 min read
Photograph via Forbes
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Hidden inside luggage, children's toys and parcels, trafficked shark fins, seahorses and sea cucumbers often slip across borders unnoticed. Now researchers in Australia have trained an AI system to recognize these marine wildlife products in airport CT scans with 92% accuracy.

Hidden inside luggage, children's toys and parcels, trafficked shark fins, seahorses and sea cucumbers often slip across borders unnoticed. Now researchers in Australia have trained an AI system to recognize these marine wildlife products in airport CT scans with 92% accuracy.

Hidden inside luggage, children's toys and parcels, trafficked shark fins, seahorses and sea cucumbers often slip across borders unnoticed. Now researchers in Australia have trained an AI system to recognize these marine wildlife products in airport CT scans with 92% accuracy.

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