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Apple will use its street view Maps photos to train AI models

Apple will use its street view Maps photos to train AI models

Yahoo25-03-2025

Apple plans to start using images it collects for Maps to train its AI models. In a disclosure spotted by 9to5Mac, the company said starting this month it would use images it captures to provide its Look Around feature for the additional purpose of training some of its generative AI models.
Look Around is Apple's answer to Google Street View. The company originally released the feature alongside its 2019 revamp of Apple Maps. The tool allows users to see locations from ground level. Apple blurs faces and license plates photographed in Look Around images to protect the privacy of any individuals caught in its survey efforts.
"In addition to improving Apple Maps and the algorithms that blur faces and license plates in images published in Look Around feature, Apple also will use blurred imagery collected during surveys conducted beginning in March 2025 to develop and improve other Apple products and services," the company writes in the disclosure. "This includes using data to train models powering Apple products and services, including models related to image recognition, creation, and enhancement."
Apple did not immediately respond to Engadget's request for more information.
The company's Apple Maps image collection policy page provides a list of regions and dates when it plans to collect new images for Look Around. People can find when Apple's survey crews and vehicles plan to visit their area by sorting by country and then clicking on a specific region.
Apple currently offers a few different features that rely on image generation models. Image Playground, for instance, allows owners of Apple Intelligence-compatible devices to write a prompt to create a new image. There's also Clean Up in Photos, which you can use to remove objects from your favorite snapshots.
Google has been using Street View images to train AI models for years. In 2017, for example, a pair of researchers from the company trained a machine learning model to generate professional-looking photographs from a dataset collected from Street View.

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Managing Screen Time: Receive an alert if your child enters the Screen Time passcode so if they've guessed it, you'll know. This is part of iOS 26 and will be available this fall. In the meantime you can still change the code remotely if you suspect they've cracked the code, without needing access to your child's device. Beyond that, you'll find options to manage which subscriptions your child can access, and whether they can send and receive Apple Cash, or remove the option entirely from the menu. Location Sharing: Get a heads-up about your child's whereabouts in real time You can set up location-based alerts for you child on their Apple Watch, iPhone or iPad to know exactly when they've arrived or left school. Vanessa Hand Orellana / CNET Whether it's an iPhone, Apple Watch or even an iPad, one of the biggest benefits of giving your child their own device is being able to keep a watchful eye on their whereabouts (just make sure they know about it too). 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You can choose whether to receive the alert just once or every time they come and go. Want to return the favor? Tap Notify [your kid's name], and follow the same steps. Your phone will automatically let your child know when you've arrived or left a designated location too. The exact settings may vary slightly depending on the age range you choose but the core controls remain the same. With iOS 26 and iPadOS 26, Apple is adding even more granular parental tools. The nudity filters will be expanded to FaceTime (and potentially third-party apps), you'll get alerts when your child enters a Screen Time passcode and you'll be able to revoke app permissions remotely even after your child has already started using the app. There are already enough things to worry about as a parent (especially with online risks), but hopefully, these features will help take at least one worry off your plate. Just remember that even the best tech tools aren't a substitute for in-person guidance from a parent or caregiver. When introducing screens to kids, make sure you're having age appropriate conversations about online safety and helping them build healthy screen time habits of their own.

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