It's hard out there for a sexter. Living life fast, easy, and one poorly lit pic at a time sure sounds like fun, but what happens when the hackers come a' knocking? Your unmentionables end up on the deep web, that's what.。 Unless, if headline-grabbing ad copy is to be believed, you just so happen to be using the latest in salaciousness-enabling app technology. Dubbed Nude, the iOS app released last week as a public beta promises to lock down any and all sensitive photos you may have on your smartphone camera roll. And, because a sexter is nothing if not lazy, Nude insists it will do all the work for you — scanning your photos and deciding which ones need that extra layer of security.。 SEE ALSO:Apple just ruined sexting
。 Here's how, according to the Oakland-based company behind the app, the subscription service is supposed to work:。 "Once our proprietary technology analyzed your camera roll and detected sensitive material, they are then imported into the app, deleted from your camera roll, and erased from iCloud," the iTunes page explains. "Best of all, analysis and storage of your sensitive material are all done locally on your phone and nothing touches cloud!"
。 Lock it down.Credit: nude
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。 Thanks for signing up! 。 "App has promise and the automatic feature can be useful in theory but this app filtered out dozens and dozens of pictures of my dog (a 13lb chihuahua mix) and a ton of bare arm and leg shots," reads one such review. "It did seem to work on real nudes but going through so many false detections is quite a bit of work."
。What does Nude have to say about this? What does Nude have to say about this? YC Chen, a company founder, explained via email that he'd rather be safe than sorry.
。 When pressed as to how, exactly, Nude trained its machine learning model to detect nudes (millions of dick picks?) Chen noted that "we built web scraping tools to scrape the web for representative images that we used to train the ML model."。 We wanted to try it out ourselves, and so happily downloaded Nude (free for a one month trail, 99 cents a month after that) and started snapping away (nothing below the belt, though). The app recognized photos of a desk and a window as SFW, but mistakenly categorized a blurry arm pic as "sensitive content." Sadly, there was no chihuahua mix nearby to photograph.。 There are much cheaper ways to do this, and they won't confuse your dog for your, well, you get the idea.
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Very sensitive.Credit: nude app。
In the end, Nude's claimed ability to scan and detect NSFW pictures feels like a bit of a gimmick to make it stand out above all the other secure photo storage apps. Which, well, that's totally fine. However, paying a monthly subscription just to keep photos of your privates away from unsuspecting camera-roll scrollers? That's a bit much. 。 That's a bit much.。