Pokémon Go changed the way people play games by blending the real world with digital adventure. From walking miles to catch ...
Most people reading this have no idea this is happening. Not just Pokemon Go. All of it. Everything we do is tracked. Our data is sold a million times over.
It has been around 10 years since Pokémon Go peaked in popularity. But there was a time when millions of people worldwide were pounding the pavement in ...
Pokémon Go players may have unknowingly helped build a massive AI training dataset through years of scanning real-world locations.
The creator of augmented reality hit Pokemon GO, Niantic, reveals that player data has been used to help train delivery robots.
Pokémon Go is a smartphone game that blends the real and digital worlds, tasking players with exploring their neighborhoods ...
Niantic’s spatial AI, built partly from optional scans submitted through its AR games, is now helping delivery robots ...
Niantic's AI spinout is training a new world model using 30 billion images of urban landmarks crowdsourced from players.
The early augmented reality smartphone app prompted hundreds of millions of players to wander into parks, parking lots, and even dimly lit alleyways, peering through their phone cameras in search of ...
Pokémon Go still draws people outside and into the community, especially at Lakes Park. But a new revelation about how player scans and images may be used is raising questions about privacy, consent ...