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fawkes

/fawks/US // fɔks //UK // (fɔːks) //

福克斯,福克思,福克斯

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : Guy, 1570–1606, English conspirator and leader in the Gunpowder plot of 1605: Guy Fawkes Day is observed on November 5 by the building of effigies and bonfires.

Examples

  • Give Fawkes a bunch of selfies and it will add pixel-level perturbations to the images that stop state-of-the-art facial recognition systems from identifying who is in the photos.

  • Fawkes has already been downloaded nearly half a million times from the project website.

  • Fawkes may keep a new facial recognition system from recognizing you—the next Clearview, say.

  • Fawkes trains a model to learn something wrong about you, and this tool trains a model to learn nothing about you.

  • In a small experiment with a data set of 50 images, Fawkes was 100% effective against all of them, preventing models trained on tweaked images of people from later recognizing images of those people in fresh images.

  • Thus the report on the Guy Fawkes effigies, which also was picked up by RT, the English-language Russian satellite channel.

  • If the majority's going to take back its share of the nation's riches, those Guy Fawkes masks may need to go on again.

  • In one of these photos a middle-aged woman with headscarf marches wearing a Guy Fawkes mask.

  • As Fawkes noted, the Nazi reference has been removed, and no explanation appears forthcoming.

  • He carried a sign reading “Angry Pacifist” and wore a USS Staten Island naval cap with a Guy Fawkes mask strapped on backward.

  • Short of catching me like a sort of Guy Fawkes blowing up the palace, the case is about as strong as it could be.

  • Fawkes is made to speak in the third person in all the four preceding examinations, three of which bear his autograph signature.

  • Each page has the signature (in copy) of ‘Jhon Jhonson,’ the name by which Fawkes chose to be known.

  • Fawkes here clearly takes the whole terrible design, with the exception of the incident of the mine, on his own shoulders.

  • According to the story told by Fawkes this place was let to Mrs. Skinner by Whynniard to store her coals in.