As sophisticated as artificial intelligence is and is likely to become, it cannot reliably distinguish between defamation and its critique, or to distinguish between defamation and satire.
|
|
Incredibly, the law did not distinguish between felonies and misdemeanors.
|
|
It's important to distinguish between buybacks and share count reductions.
|
|
"We need to distinguish between competition and competitiveness," Bris said.
|
|
A binary code How to distinguish between men and women?
|
|
Prince Muhammad now seeks to distinguish between Shias and Iran.
|
|
And you know, I do distinguish between critic and reporter.
|
|
"Bacteria doesn't distinguish between appropriate and inappropriate use," said Klein.
|
|
But how would a viewer distinguish between the two perspectives?
|
|
The study also didn't distinguish between different types of alcohol.
|
|
But you can also distinguish between educational and entertainment content.
|
|
But the film doesn't bother to distinguish between the two.
|
|
So she needed a way to distinguish between the two.
|
|
It's useful to distinguish between bulk collection and targeted surveillance.
|
|
Next, EAGLE seeks to distinguish between golfers of equivalent OWGRs.
|
|
These regular methamphetamine users could not distinguish between the two.
|
|
It helps me distinguish between thirst, boredom, and actual hunger.
|
|
Universities must thus distinguish between offensive ideas and personal incivility.
|
|
They can't distinguish between right and wrong, Dr. Riess said.
|
|
How do we distinguish between a just and unjust law?
|
|
The principle does not distinguish between great minds and mediocrities.
|
|
She doesn't distinguish between young and old, performer and nonperformer.
|
|
For example, you can learn to distinguish between distress and discomfort.
|
|
He can't even distinguish between the good and bads on Mexico.
|
|
The weapons are indiscriminate and cannot distinguish between combatant and noncombatant.
|
|
Advice: Distinguish between applications hosted in the cloud from cloud services.
|
|
I thought most of us could distinguish between entertainment and facts.
|
|
It should also distinguish between good and bad competition in finance.
|
|
A recent experiment shows that archerfish can distinguish between human faces.
|
|
So, how do we distinguish between self-betterment and harmful perfectionism?
|
|
Both distinguish between an animate direct object and an inanimate one.
|
|
The DDB's survey does not distinguish between users and problem users.
|
|
Others, such as Australia do not distinguish between men and women.
|
|
Are the creators able to distinguish between various South African accents?
|
|
Fazzina doesn't distinguish between crimes, or who can and can't join.
|
|
But Trump, like a small child who can't distinguish between good
|
|
Chiefly, it doesn't distinguish between a checking and a savings account.
|
|
In truth, there's no way to distinguish between the two. Mrs.
|
|
It doesn't distinguish between paying customers and tourists who are sightseeing.
|
|
Somehow, Trump doesn't seem to be able to distinguish between them.
|
|
Boneparth advises investors to distinguish between cash holdings and investment holdings.
|
|
But the law doesn't distinguish between sex work and coerced labor.
|
|
Early in the pregnancy they can recognize and distinguish between tastes.
|
|
You're right to distinguish between lazy rivers and new, upgraded laboratories.
|
|
Name Withheld, New York First, let's distinguish between two different issues.
|
|
First, it would clearly distinguish between the EU and the eurozone.
|
|
We should not distinguish between "foreign" and "domestic" violence against citizens.
|
|
The study did not distinguish between mild, severe and critical cases.
|
|
Fred Hiatt: So you distinguish between the political and military goals.
|
|
This changed the way I distinguish between relevant and irrelevant stimuli.
|
|
Existing radar tracking systems could rarely distinguish between large birds and drones.
|
|
So, I don&apost think we should distinguish between men and women.
|
|
"Domestic violence doesn't distinguish between communities; it can happen anywhere," Blakely said.
|
|
Pigeons have also demonstrated an ability to distinguish between different human faces.
|
|
It obviously also can't distinguish between, for example, milk and chocolate milk.
|
|
There is nothing to distinguish between any two people in the space.
|
|
Is it even possible for a critic to distinguish between the two?
|
|
How do you distinguish between a Patsy look and an Edina look?
|
|
So there's -- you need to distinguish between synthetic life and artificial life.
|
|
How do you distinguish between artistic photos of sex and pornographic photos?
|
|
We spoke to figures from Berlin's scene to distinguish between the two.
|
|
Sometimes it's hard to distinguish between self-deprecating and self-disparaging humor.
|
|
The coronavirus does not distinguish between Democrats and Republicans; neither should Congress.
|
|
" He added: "We have to distinguish between the people and the government.
|
|
It's important to distinguish between the lobbying groups and their members, though.
|
|
The rest of us should distinguish between them, because their results differ.
|
|
However, digital media channels "don't distinguish between quality of relationships," he said.
|
|
Being able to distinguish between real work and imagined work is critical.
|
|
We failed to distinguish between the supportive state and the regulatory state.
|
|
After a point, you won't be able to distinguish between the two.
|
|
"We have to distinguish between the causes and the symptoms," she said.
|
|
On the other hand, he did not distinguish between work and life.
|
|
You have to distinguish between two things: sexual attraction and sexual behavior.
|
|
But how do you distinguish between the two before throwing down your cash?
|
|
Its voters can distinguish between me and any other person, including President Trump.
|
|
This number did not distinguish between ages or the era of military service.
|
|
The only purpose this serves is to help you distinguish between alarms—e.g.
|
|
Distinguish between the two in order to reach the end of the race.
|
|
It is important to clearly distinguish between the Kurds and the PKK terrorists.
|
|
But the law fails to distinguish between "sex trafficking" and consensual sex work.
|
|
We must distinguish between those irregular migrants and those in need of protection.
|
|
"Russia doesn't, so we distinguish between Chinese and Russian actions and respond accordingly."
|
|
And who is going to distinguish between mistakes and criminal action or intent?
|
|
For buyers abroad, it is difficult to distinguish between legal and illegal gold.
|
|
The breakthrough came when they found that bacteria could distinguish between different surfaces.
|
|
Can you distinguish between a normal chain restaurant scent and a weird one?
|
|
Classic liberalism suggests that attempting to distinguish between hate speech "punching up," i.e.
|
|
But Epstein's analysis did not distinguish between voters' interest levels in different topics.
|
|
That's every Sunday, so there's no need to distinguish between any of them.
|
|
It's our job, after all, to distinguish between the obvious and the important.
|
|
Do you have confidence in your ability to distinguish between fact and opinion?
|
|
"In Syria, you can no longer distinguish between right and wrong," she said.
|
|
When talking about sanctions, it is useful to distinguish between impact and effectiveness.
|
|
"We have to distinguish between pro-profit and pro-growth policies," she said.
|
|
Life in distressed communities can mean learning to distinguish between firecrackers and gunshots.
|
|
They haven't found ways to distinguish between teens sexting consensually and child pornography.
|
|
Google confirmed the policy will not distinguish between different types of unproven uses.
|
|
Nor does he adequately distinguish between conservative or right-wing politics and fascism.
|
|
It is difficult, at times, to distinguish between mistakes, satire, and deliberate deception.
|
|
A plan would also have to distinguish between different groups of people benefiting.
|
|
The device can even distinguish between different people, and can track motion and posture.
|
|
Well, you can distinguish between Reddit and Facebook, because that's a highly controlled environment.
|
|
You might conclude that ultimately I don't distinguish between formally and informally trained students.
|
|
What do you do with someone who does not distinguish between truth and untruth?
|
|
Apparently they can distinguish between different frequencies because of spider silk's unusual dampening ability.
|
|
Another model then tried to distinguish between the edited shot the original professional image.
|
|
One of Becker's earliest contributions was to distinguish between specific and general human capital.
|
|
Marques developed a test that allowed researchers to distinguish between dengue and Zika infections.
|
|
Feinting serves to make it difficult to distinguish between legitimate attacks and fake ones.
|
|
Google says its language identification model (LangID) can now distinguish between 2,000 language pairs.
|
|
A failure to distinguish between the two risks steering markets in the wrong direction.
|
|
But perhaps this is a way to distinguish between the President and his supporters.
|
|
She writes that it's hard to distinguish between real life and Second Life feelings.
|
|
That means there's often little time or desire to distinguish between trash and treasure.
|
|
But you need to be able to distinguish between one thing and the other.
|
|
It will also work on developing algorithms that can distinguish between incivility and tolerance.
|
|
"The rule of law requires that we distinguish between sins and crimes," he said.
|
|
And who can distinguish between the real and the simulation at this point anyway?
|
|
The transition is complete when people can no longer distinguish between truth and feeling.
|
|
Melissa (my wife) and I think it's important to distinguish between habits and content.
|
|
Yet many hospitals don't distinguish between the two, disrupting everyone on a predefined schedule.
|
|
But it is usually quite easy to distinguish between a good and bad translation.
|
|
Here as elsewhere there is a need to distinguish between initial and delayed effects.
|
|
Other studies also found that your brain does not distinguish between imagination and reality.
|
|
"The smoke does not distinguish between the Palestinian and the Israeli sky," she said.
|
|
Humans integrate both types of intelligence so seamlessly that we hardly distinguish between them.
|
|
This would give immigrants a tool to distinguish between the reprobates and the righteous.
|
|
How do you distinguish between trying to injure someone and trying to hurt him?
|
|
Others distinguish between neglect and abuse, or clear records after five or seven years.
|
|
McCracken refuses to distinguish between the absurdity of comedy and the absurdity of tragedy.
|
|
Google Home is getting smart enough to distinguish between different users in a household.
|
|
Let's distinguish between whether a cause is difficult to quantify and whether it's political.
|
|
Will voters really distinguish between the Republicans' presidential candidate and the down-ballot races?
|
|
Sessions' decision fails to distinguish between these forms of gender-based violence and domestic violence.
|
|
At that size, your eyes just can't distinguish between the two at typical viewing distances.
|
|
They don't distinguish between giving to the Clintons, personally, and giving to their charitable organization.
|
|
That setup makes it hard to distinguish between espionage and the everyday work of security.
|
|
People were also asked to distinguish between handwritten envelopes and ones created by the software.
|
|
These participants were able to distinguish between smooth and rough 77 percent of the time.
|
|
It is important to distinguish between short-term interest rates and long-term interest rates.
|
|
The Russians, just like the Assad forces, do not distinguish between civilians and jihadist fighters.
|
|
Supernova's AI can understand a product's purpose and distinguish between navigation elements, buttons, and more.
|
|
Consistency makes it easier for them and for you to distinguish between work and downtime.
|
|
Jillian Deri: It's useful to distinguish between a poly relationship and a non-monogamous relationship.
|
|
Well, I would distinguish between worries over how foreign powers might intervene in 2020 ... Deepfakes.
|
|
They, like some today in Congress, refuse to distinguish between Israel and the occupied territories.
|
|
We both were able to distinguish between the two patties, but our editor was floored.
|
|
At this historical moment, it is acutely important to distinguish between theoretical and experimental fields.
|
|
I'm glad that JJ is able to distinguish between "fight you" and "kill you", though.
|
|
Do you distinguish between asking Kellyanne Conway a question and asking Donald Trump a question?
|
|
The second prong requires the defendant to be able to distinguish between right and wrong.
|
|
I find it difficult to distinguish between fear of change and fear of the other.
|
|
As information streams at us, it can be difficult to distinguish between fact and fiction.
|
|
But it's also important to distinguish between the current moment and the remainder of 2018.
|
|
Later, Andy could not distinguish between an interesting young person and just a young person.
|
|
Machines cannot always distinguish between what is dangerous and what has social value, they said.
|
|
The mechanism is unknown, and the study could not distinguish between different types of drinks.
|
|
However, the rule of law demands that we distinguish between political sins and federal felonies.
|
|
Also, they weren't able to distinguish between consumption of diet soda and sugar-sweetened soda.
|
|
It was no longer feasible, he continued, to distinguish between musically "correct" and "incorrect" camps.
|
|
It is not always easy to distinguish between the crotchety couch pundit and Brooker himself.
|
|
The students were then asked to distinguish between the genuine notes and the fake ones.
|
|
"I don't distinguish between mental and physical when it comes to respecting privacy," he added.
|
|
Advocacy groups argue that kids often lack the sophistication to distinguish between ads and regular videos.
|
|
She explains that this is because the thyroid cannot distinguish between "good" iodine and radioactive iodine.
|
|
"You need to distinguish between the effects of prohibition and the effects of enforcement," he said.
|
|
" How To Deal:"Again, recognize when you're ruminating and distinguish between [that] and active problem-solving.
|
|
YouTube is rolling out some tools to help viewers distinguish between a conspiracy theory and fact.
|
|
The dogs will then be trained to distinguish between positive and negative samples using odor clues.
|
|
So when we return something to our customer we distinguish between major crimes and minor crimes.
|
|
George H.W. Bush was the last president to distinguish between two different tasks: campaigning and governing.
|
|
In many of the cases, it's hard to distinguish between bad customer service from malicious intent.
|
|
Usually however, this knowledge is used to distinguish between 'them' (in the past) and 'us' (now).
|
|
Maybe offering these new wristbands will give consumers a way to distinguish between the two brands.
|
|
That's because these new tests will help doctors distinguish between aggressive disease and slow-growing tumors.
|
|
Republicans have been at pains this primary season to distinguish between Donald Trump and his supporters.
|
|
We Company executives urge journalists to distinguish between losing money and investing money in future growth.
|
|
Partly because of that delay, other astronomers were unable to distinguish between possibilities mundane and spectacular.
|
|
By placing the player into the woman's perspective, they are forced to distinguish between them all.
|
|
Dogs, horses and pandas can also distinguish between different human facial expressions, similar studies have shown.
|
|
Since a nuclear explosion would not distinguish between combatants and civilians, doesn't that imply universal impact?
|
|
He has no ears, no nose, and no ability to distinguish between living creatures and objects.
|
|
Under these murky circumstances, how can a casual observer distinguish between what's important and what isn't?
|
|
After that incident, the company updated the software to better distinguish between asbestos and vape smoke.
|
|
I could distinguish between a favor and an order and demand and so could my subordinates.
|
|
Armed opposition groups must end all attacks that fail to distinguish between military targets and civilians.
|
|
To this day, asylum laws in the UK do not distinguish between Yazidis and other Iraqis.
|
|
However, after some work, I managed to adapt my algorithm and distinguish between the two states.
|
|
Those tests can't distinguish between someone who just smoked and someone who used several days before.
|
|
And the shrinking sample sizes make it harder to distinguish between true patterns and statistical noise.
|
|
Legal experts seemed to agree that Ms. Conway's Twitter feed didn't distinguish between policy and politics.
|
|
Respondents didn't even distinguish between a photographer who would refuse service for religious or nonreligious reasons .
|
|
Syrians say they can distinguish between Russian and Syrian planes because the Russian aircraft fly higher.
|
|
Psychologists distinguish between these two sides of passion, what they call harmonious passion versus obsessive passion.
|
|
That said, the old-school journals still attempt to distinguish between the two flavors of article.
|
|
"Give them the wisdom to distinguish between facts and opinions without lambasting the messengers," he concluded.
|
|
It's a difference Ocasio-Cortez was happy to distinguish between in her response to the organization.
|
|
"This phenomenon makes it difficult to distinguish between political and race-based decision making," he wrote.
|
|
Yes, the series is fiction, and yes, most TV viewers can distinguish between entertainment and reality.
|
|
Note that the survey did not distinguish between respondents in same-sex and different-sex relationships.
|
|
This argument, however, does not distinguish between the return on an investment and the investment itself.
|
|
"The reputation of the industry is becoming so damaged lawmakers don't want to distinguish" between them.
|
|
Among the gag gifts are also some unironically beautiful things; Cusack doesn't distinguish between the two.
|
|
But at around two months, they&aposll begin to distinguish between day and night, says Harbhajan.
|
|
Architects can distinguish between arrowslits, bartizans, and spandrels, while pilots speak of upwash and adverse yaw.
|
|
The Sessions memo did not distinguish between enforcement against marijuana used for recreational versus medicinal purposes.
|
|
And it is important to distinguish between a putative rule of evidence and an affirmative defense.
|
|
Again, we have to be careful to distinguish between breaking the rules and committing a crime.
|
|
For one, it helps distinguish between public investment – which should boost net worth – and debt-funded handouts.
|
|
In some instances, it was difficult to distinguish between golf balls and hail stones at area courses.
|
|
They're so good, in fact, that sometimes it's even hard for us to distinguish between mass vs.
|
|
Ezra Klein: How do you distinguish between a hot take, a smart take, other ... A boring take?
|
|
Currently, Apple's App Store guidelines don't distinguish between these two cases, but maybe it's time they did.
|
|
The United Nations report does not distinguish between who migrates with legal papers and who does not.
|
|
It draws upon long-standing Catholic moral teaching to distinguish between "formal" and "material" cooperation with evil.
|
|
By six months, an infant should be able to distinguish between a bottle and a rubber doll.
|
|
Confusion around the term "efficiency" stems from the failure to distinguish between "using" water and "consuming" water.
|
|
It is so tender that Sofia finds herself unable to distinguish between the words beloved and beheaded.
|
|
But China's model of state-directed capitalism makes it hard to distinguish between public and private affairs.
|
|
The software can learn your voice and distinguish between all the different speakers in a given conversation.
|
|
But it's important, Espejo told me, to distinguish between failing to deliver on promises and not trying.
|
|
"We want to distinguish between good and bad and not recommend bad to users," Shiqi told me.
|
|
The update also comes with Named Timers, which allows users to distinguish between multiple timers they set.
|
|
Again, I've do that very clearly on the show, I've tried to distinguish between racism and xenophobia.
|
|
Third, and more generally, we should distinguish between low market earnings and a decent overall living standard.
|
|
In many ways, it makes no sense to distinguish between Trump and the Republican Party any longer.
|
|
"We will not distinguish between attacks from Shia militias in #Iraq & the #IRGC that controls them," Sen.
|
|
"How will companies maintain the records needed to distinguish between nondeductible entertainment and deductible meals?" he asked.
|
|
We ought to take pains to distinguish between two different questions that might otherwise be jumbled together.
|
|
Another drawback is that researchers weren't able to distinguish between unique viewers and repeat viewers on YouTube.
|
|
As a matter of record, paint restorers are careful to distinguish between the original and restored areas.
|
|
The estimates do not distinguish between cash bonuses and stock-based awards that vest over multiple years.
|
|
What we're finding instead is it's very hard to distinguish [between them] because their results are similar.
|
|
And if yes, how would students distinguish between a reasonable level or proportionality and an unreasonable level?
|
|
A handful of criminal prosecutions have stalled because DNA tests cannot distinguish between suspects who are twins.
|
|
Administrators must help students distinguish between feelings that have a rational basis and those that do not.
|
|
Sunstein asks us to distinguish between disclosure of the government's outputs and disclosure of the government's inputs.
|
|
A color specialist at a paint manufacturer, however, can distinguish between virtually hundreds of colors of white.
|
|
By and large, kids aren't taught the right vocabulary to distinguish between sexual assault and bad sex.
|
|
But, according to the rules of quantum mechanics, there is no way to distinguish between identical photons.
|
|
Without oversight of schools, parents struggle to distinguish between the good and the bad, and kids suffer.
|
|
It's often difficult to distinguish between what you want to happen and what is likely to happen.
|
|
Consider how to distinguish between fan behavior like cheering and booing, and abusive behavior and racist chants?
|
|
Andrew appreciates lawmakers who can distinguish between their own views and their responsibility as legislators and policymakers.
|
|
"At this point, it's impossible to distinguish between Putin the man and Putin the system," she says.
|
|
Your brain can't distinguish between what you visualize and what's actually out there in the real world.
|
|
If you can't distinguish between friend and foe, how can you fight and whom do you fight?
|
|
This would involve using algorithms trained to distinguish between accurate and misleading text and images in posts.
|
|
And spring is the best opportunity for human admirers to distinguish between the city's warm weather gulls.
|
|
In this alarming topsy-turvy landscape, it's not always possible to distinguish between reality, imagination and psychosis.
|
|
Nondense or fatty tissue appears black, and it is easier to distinguish between healthy tissue and cancer.
|
|
Plus, as the academy is quick to note, the ancient Greeks didn't distinguish between poetry and song.
|
|
It is also important to distinguish between "preemptive" and "preventive" strikes when it comes to military operations.
|
|
The virus doesn't distinguish between wealthy or mass-market customers, and neither will a broader economic slowdown.
|
|
U.S. officials said they have urged the Saudi-led coalition to better distinguish between military targets and civilians.
|
|
Another recent study in Science found that dogs' brains can distinguish between different words and tones of voice.
|
|
Consumers cannot distinguish between the companies they engage with in the online world, so neither should the rules.
|
|
However, the test cannot distinguish between the different atypical disorders, which doctors must rely on symptoms to diagnose.
|
|
In fact, he conducted blind taste tests and found most people couldn't distinguish between Skyline and Gold Star.
|
|
PowerVision claims that the system can distinguish between species, permitting the angler to identify the target he wants.
|
|
As noted by The Verge, Home cannot distinguish between work and personal accounts for the same user yet.
|
|
LinkedIn can't distinguish between being in the PhD program and having a PhD (I forgot to update it).
|
|
In natural speech, we would distinguish between the two meaning[s] by adding subtle pauses in different places.
|
|
Chinese researchers have trained a computer to distinguish between criminals and non-criminals nine times out of ten.
|
|
"This is made harder when we have to distinguish between real events and spoofs," Ayers said by email.
|
|
This affects about 5% of men, and makes it hard for them to distinguish between red and green.
|
|
It is hard to distinguish between short-run swings and structural economic changes resulting from demography or technology.
|
|
Scientists have shown for the first time how a species of tropical fish can distinguish between human faces.
|
|
The conclusion from our tests suggests that above a certain level of compression, people cannot distinguish between services.
|
|
I am going to extend (Israeli) sovereignty and I don't distinguish between settlement blocs and the isolated settlements.
|
|
In fact, several forms of reference pricing do not distinguish between innovative new medications and older generic alternatives.
|
|
Those lessons are especially important in a time when even many adults cannot distinguish between facts and falsehoods.
|
|
"First you create rules that don't distinguish between child pornography and famous war photographs," Espin Egil Hansen wrote.
|
|
"[T]he International Astronomical Union Minor Planet Center does not distinguish between small asteroids and meteoroids," Reddy said.
|
|
So it's not as easy to distinguish between the two types as you might think, Dr. Chanchani says.
|
|
Airborne instruments are able to measure the amount of plant cover and to distinguish between crops and weeds.
|
|
Like Waze, Google Maps' new feature doesn't let users distinguish between different types of police operations to report.
|
|
She did not distinguish between the victims, but regarded them as all equally worthy of dignity and recognition.
|
|
It's hard to distinguish between who will lead a company towards success, and who will crash and burn.
|
|
N.M.: Here I want to distinguish between two figures: the protester and the reactionary (meant literally, not pejoratively).
|
|
We did a blind taste test to see if we could distinguish between the original and Impossible Whoppers.
|
|
The hippocampus, a structure important for memory, has unique properties which enable it to distinguish between similar memories.
|
|
" Doing so, he argued, is the only way to distinguish between "what's actually true" and what's "conspiratorial nonsense.
|
|
Sometimes it's hard to distinguish between them because there are so many competing start-ups at this point.
|
|
Cellupica said the SEC has highlighted that the current advertising rule does not distinguish between types of clients.
|
|
Federal officials said landlords must distinguish between arrests and convictions and cannot use an arrest to ban applicants.
|
|
Like others in the competition, the girls' robot can pick up and distinguish between blue and orange balls.
|
|
"Unfortunately, there's no reliable way to distinguish between early symptoms of the flu and coronavirus," Dr. Adalja said.
|
|
We have to distinguish between imperfect leaders and corrupt ones, and we need the vocabulary to do so.
|
|
Few universities — or media accounts — distinguish between what academics refer to as high-risk and low-risk fraternities.
|
|
Rawat didn't appear to distinguish between young Kashmiris who had joined militant groups and those protesting as citizens.
|
|
Dr. Eaton, in an interview, said that the authors did not distinguish between industry-funded, and independent research.
|
|
What to look for For parents, it might be hard to distinguish between normal teen angst and depression.
|
|
Adams also noted that it is nearly impossible to distinguish between a miscarriage and a self-managed abortion.
|
|
It's one of the metrics for "outrage" that they take to distinguish between "real" outrage and superficial outrage.
|
|
Its 3,000-word impartiality guidelines distinguish between issues that are merely "controversial" and those that are "major matters".
|
|
A better way to measure obesity is an X-ray, which can distinguish between fat and other innards.
|
|
It can help you to distinguish between what is real and what is fake, to notice something dangerous.
|
|
For one, viewers find it hard to distinguish between an animation that's hyper-real and just real enough.
|
|
Much of the skill here is in aggressively filtering incoming reports to distinguish between fact and wild fiction.
|
|
But jurors ultimately did not distinguish between Allen and Olds—each teenager was convicted of second-degree murder.
|
|
In a statement, the company said the law failed to distinguish between ordinary users and illegal hotel operators.
|
|
My parents were worried and concerned, but it was hard to distinguish between teenage angst, depression, and drug use.
|
|
Correction: This story has been updated to distinguish between plaintiffs in the suit and nonprofit groups providing legal defense.
|
|
With these candidates on the way, astrobiologists must learn how to distinguish between alien photosynthesizers and runaway ocean boiling.
|
|
What's more, Gauld's charts don't distinguish between dead coral and live coral, nor do they contain coral absence data.
|
|
Experts say the larger the face, the more precisely it will be able to distinguish between warheads and decoys.
|
|
This will be important for media outlets looking to distinguish between legitimate news and growing breed of 'fake news'.
|
|
In March, in the aftermath of the Christchurch shooting, I tried to distinguish between internet problems and platform problems.
|
|
Part of her popularity stems from her ability to distinguish between the theory and reality behind American immigration policy.
|
|
A former ref said that he tried to distinguish between pejorative adjectives (generally permitted) and nouns (not so much).
|
|
The ska songs are obvious, but it takes a trained ear, an expert to distinguish between rocksteady and reggae.
|
|
Socialists are usually extremely reluctant to distinguish between French citizens, said Patrick Weil, the country's leading historian on immigration.
|
|
Fishbein has previously claimed his client hears voices and "cannot distinguish between what is real and what is not."
|
|
It could distinguish between samples from patients suffering from gastric cancer and bladder cancer only 64% of the time.
|
|
Specifically, they do not distinguish between a county with millions of residents and a county with a few thousand.
|
|
Barcelona needs clear rules that distinguish between home sharing and bad actors, like other major cities around the world.
|
|
Crucially, this test can also distinguish between Zika and similar viruses as well as identify different strains of Zika.
|
|
Without zooming in and studying the details, you'll find it hard to distinguish between the Pixel and S9 cameras.
|
|
Moreover, Jonathan Zdziarski points out that the language about making data "intelligible" doesn't distinguish between encrypted and deleted data.
|
|
How do you distinguish between populism and reactionary conservatism on the one hand and actual fascism on the other?
|
|
Facebook has seemingly decided that it's not worth trying to distinguish between white supremacy and other forms of racism.
|
|
Facial expressions distinguish between interrogative and declarative sentences, modify adverbs, convey emotional tone, define spatial relationships and much more.
|
|
Critics say there is no way to distinguish between truth and falsehoods in the records turned over to Congress.
|
|
He notes that other countries have found ways to distinguish between recognizing contributions of historic figures and honoring them.
|
|
He also said the rule in its current form failed to adequately distinguish between "selling" activities and "advice" activities.
|
|
In 2017 it often takes effort to distinguish between novel forms and received ones, alternative forms and normative ones.
|
|
In fact, 82 percent couldn't distinguish between a real news story on a website and a "sponsored content" post.
|
|
Not like, for example, when the official Golden Globes Twitter handler couldn't distinguish between America Ferrara and Gina Rodriguez.
|
|
Teaching them to distinguish between cats and dogs, on the other hand, takes much more time, energy, and creativity.
|
|
The reason is that it is often very difficult to distinguish between the problematic statements or conduct of presidents.
|
|
The metric was widely available and became by default the standard way to distinguish between poorer and richer children.
|
|
The most unsettling and dangerous aspect of his personality was his total inability to distinguish between good and evil.
|
|
The AmberBox system is designed to distinguish between gunfire sounds and other loud noises to minimize any false readings.
|
|
Many officers in Rockford seemed to distinguish between what Thurmond and Turner did and what "real police" work entailed.
|
|
Another structure which supports memory, the Perirhinal cortex, does not have a good ability to distinguish between similar memories.
|
|
We don't distinguish between gender, ethnicity, or sexual orientation, so it's more of a collective identity in every sense.
|
|
The most unsettling and dangerous aspect of his personality was his total inability to distinguish between good and evil.
|
|
Android is such a mess that you have to distinguish between the Google devices and the zoo of others.
|
|
Facing a viral enemy that does not distinguish between us, previously unthinkable alliances have formed across the political spectrum.
|
|
Because Ruth can't distinguish between memory and reality any more, for her, the dead are no longer staying dead.
|
|
One was that if they swore, he tried to distinguish between adjectives (generally permitted) and nouns (not so much).
|
|
You can hear them collectively working toward the right response, and it can be difficult to distinguish between them.
|
|
For example, Britons distinguish between "in hospital," meaning being there for treatment, and "in the hospital," for just visiting.
|
|
Artists — at least the ones I know and respect — don't distinguish between minor and major, self-taught or otherwise.
|
|
And because the test measures antibodies and not the bug itself, it can't distinguish between current and past infections.
|
|
The Fortune 500 ranking doesn't answer the question, for example, because it doesn't distinguish between domestic and foreign revenue.
|
|
Indeed, it's getting harder to distinguish between the makings of a Halloween costume and the accessory of the moment.
|
|
Other times, they sidestepped the more difficult questions, like how to distinguish between free expression and incitement to violence.
|
|
How do you think people distinguish between what is on social, and what's on some of the bigger outlets?
|
|
The new label will help consumers distinguish between sugars that occur naturally in foods and those that are added.
|
|
I used to answer the emails from our subscribers, and few could distinguish between the ads and the editorial.
|
|
It is silly to distinguish between cousins and siblings (or parents-to-be, for that matter) as appropriate hosts.
|
|
If Google were to try to distinguish between the two, Turner believes it would riddle its policy with loopholes.
|
|
Red lines are the favorite way for politicians to distinguish between their usual hyperbolic language and a final ultimatum.
|
|
It does not distinguish between low priority, high priority, criminals or noncriminals, however you want to look at it.
|
|
While they mostly agreed that it was important to distinguish between humans and machines, they differed in their reasoning.
|
|
Over time, the wave metaphor became a way to describe and distinguish between different eras and generations of feminism.
|
|
Victims have felt a collective pain, unable to distinguish between the grief of personal experience and that of others.
|
|
And how do we distinguish between the truly desperate and the truly evil who hide (so we suspect) among them?
|
|
One reason may be that voters failed to distinguish between Hispanics and illegal immigrants, a distinction the president has blurred.
|
|
Critics of the BMI approach, including some doctors and researchers, note that the calculation can't distinguish between fat and muscle.
|
|
And I also think we need to distinguish between what has already happened and what might happen in the future.
|
|
Some card makers will also list a maximum speed and/or a read speed separately to distinguish between different cards.
|
|
Twitter seems to be indicating that other companies do not distinguish between daily users who can and cannot be monetized.
|
|
One drawback of using win probability is that it fails to distinguish between merely outstanding performances and historically dominant ones.
|
|
Everyone has that friend who claims they can distinguish between two drinks that, to everyone else, taste exactly the same.
|
|
But White House spokesman Sean Spicer said the Trump Administration may distinguish between medical and recreational use of the drug.
|
|
The coolest feature is the camera's ability to recognize people, and to distinguish between known and trusted individuals, and strangers.
|
|
Can you distinguish between a devout person being killed, maybe for political or personal reasons, and dying for one's beliefs?
|
|
The underlying problem is a basic one: sports bodies still have no satisfactory way to distinguish between men and women.
|
|
Observers need to distinguish between whether voters are switching candidates or simply becoming more excited about their candidate of choice.
|
|
Sociologists of science generally distinguish between two forms of knowledge, concepts descended from the work of famed scholar Michael Polanyi.
|
|
The latest addition to Sentry is a sensor module that's designed to distinguish between airplanes, and gauge speed and direction.
|
|
His advisers didn't know whether he was an isolationist or a militarist, or whether he could distinguish between the two.
|
|
Some sources share the same set of isotopic fingerprints, making it hard to distinguish between certain fossil and microbial sources.
|
|
It also can't distinguish between the question of "who is" a person, and a request for that person's contact card.
|
|
That's because BMI doesn't distinguish between fat and muscle, which could be a real problem for someone who is athletic.
|
|
How do you distinguish between good intentions that just didn't work out, not a product market fit versus bad execution.
|
|
But here, again, it's impossible for the government to distinguish between predatory pricing and legitimate price competition that benefits consumers.
|
|
Until he makes his findings public, the American public isn't always in a good position to distinguish between the two.
|
|
However, metal detectors are slow and full of false positives – they cannot distinguish between a Smith & Wesson and an iPhone.
|
|
He offers instead that the company is now working on artificial intelligence that can distinguish between real and fake posts.
|
|
But with so many choices, it might be easy for an outside observer to not really directly distinguish between them.
|
|
In those instances, it seemed that police officers did not distinguish between the alleged lawbreakers and those covering the events.
|
|
When considering the intellectual capacity of teenagers, it is important to distinguish between what psychologists call "cold" and "hot" cognition.
|
|
There was just one catch: The parolee had an identical twin, and standard DNA tests can't distinguish between identical twins.
|
|
Prosecutors in Michigan had been considering using the technique to distinguish between the twins in the Grand Rapids rape case.
|
|
A major problem with Mr. Garrow's essay, questionable evidence aside, is that he fails to adequately distinguish between the two.
|
|
While some organizations welcome the knowledge, others see hackers as the enemy and hardly distinguish between white hats and cybercriminals.
|
|
Now consumers can distinguish between sugars naturally present in fruits, vegetables and dairy products — and those sweeteners added in factories.
|
|
Those citations prompted a political uproar that failed to distinguish between useful comparisons and treating foreign rulings as binding precedents.
|
|
It also can't distinguish between the question of "who is" a person and a request for that person's contact card.
|
|
She said after Lasik, all people lose contrast sensitivity, the ability to distinguish between shades of gray, to some degree.
|
|
With so many working from home, people seem unable to distinguish between being in private from being out in public.
|
|
"In the longer term, I think it will be impossible to distinguish between the real pictures and the fake pictures."
|
|
He added that it was important to distinguish between Mr. Rubenstein and the gallery, which owes money to many people.
|
|
To distinguish between the two, they seek out companies with little debt and strong free cash flows, Mr. Wong said.
|
|
Recent research has shown that amphibians have a vision system that help them distinguish between colors in really dim light.
|
|
Trump has the temperament of a leader who doesn't distinguish between his private desires and demons and the public interest.
|
|
Thankfully, Eve (or was it Jess?) provided us with a helpful way to distinguish between the sisters: their eye color.
|
|
It was not clear that she understood how various student loan and aid programs worked, or could distinguish between them.
|
|
But any sensible person can distinguish between an effective operating officer and a whirling disaster who is only about himself.
|
|
BMI, however, is considered by some experts too limited a measure, since this calculation doesn't distinguish between fat and muscle.
|
|
But how do you distinguish between clumsy attempts to relate with someone's culture and a more uncomfortable sort of fixation?
|
|
Very little is known about the ability of elasmobranchs — that's sharks, rays and skates — and their ability to distinguish between sounds.
|
|
"To be pedantic about it, a lot of us distinguish [between] AI and AGI as an 'artificial general intelligence,'" he says.
|
|
Face ID&aposs ability to distinguish between twins has also been put to the test in early reviews, with varying results .
|
|
Such a pairing is called a duality: Either one works, and there's no test you could use to distinguish between them.
|
|
In fact, when viewed under a microscope, it is impossible to distinguish between a tumor from a human and a dog.
|
|
But the technology is error-prone, and it can be difficult for scientists to distinguish between those errors and small mutations.
|
|
In that demo, the transcription service was able to distinguish between speakers and create a real-time transcript of the meeting.
|
|
After a quick setup process, it knows when you are speaking, and it can distinguish between different voices in the conversation.
|
|
It fails to distinguish between good and bad debt and doesn't address Africa's debt levels on a country-by-country basis.
|
|
The QC35s couldn't distinguish between the person wearing them and nearby talkers, leading to a garbled, nonsensical mess of a transcript.
|
|
Coincidentally enough, it just came out earlier this week that Amazon is working on getting Alexa to distinguish between voices, too.
|
|
"Their planes do not distinguish between civilians and combatants, man or woman," the message continued, in apparent reference to the strikes.
|
|
The launcher has been redesigned as a big black shade with icons that better distinguish between web apps and Android apps.
|
|
Two candidates, though, are being modified further so that researchers will be able to distinguish between infected pigs and vaccinated animals.
|
|
The mistake prompted urgent research into "receiver operating characteristics", the ability of radar operators to distinguish between true and false alarms.
|
|
The Russian Foreign Ministry is already complaining that the US is not keeping its pledge to distinguish between moderates and terrorists.
|
|
Two, it lets Facebook distinguish between paid and regular posts on publisher pages, and sort them in the News Feed accordingly.
|
|
The research also shows that there's a way — however imperfect — to distinguish between ordinary bears and scary bears that predict recessions.
|
|
We have little language to distinguish between what we might call "cultural" Christianity — with nationalist elements — and spiritual or theological beliefs.
|
|
US statistics don't distinguish between survivors of the practice and people at risk, though there's an effort underway to change that.
|
|
Obviously this is a very difficult topic in which it is of paramount importance to starkly distinguish between fantasy and reality.
|
|
In a recent episode, contestants had to correctly distinguish between daytime and "big time" judges like Judy Sheindlin and Elena Kagan.
|
|
One of the most exact ways to measure obesity is an X-ray, which can distinguish between fat and other innards.
|
|
The new rules plainly distinguish between marketing, which does not require adherence to a fiduciary duty, and giving advice, which does.
|
|
Mr Erdogan's government has occasionally referred to 1915 as a tragedy, but has never cared to distinguish between perpetrators and victims.
|
|
After hearing the description, it is difficult to distinguish between what the government was doing, and what Google proposes to do.
|
|
Trump's figures also do not distinguish between deaths caused by drugs smuggled into the country versus those prescribed by US doctors.
|
|
But it should distinguish between those who took part in the coup and those who simply belonged to the Gulen movement.
|
|
The biggest thing to distinguish between them, he says, is how well they support you in the event of a breach.
|
|
Its analysts track people who have moved — so they can distinguish between truly new voters and those who are re-registering.
|
|
The chairwoman of the National Democratic Party, when asked to distinguish between socialism and Democratic politics was unable to do so.
|
|
So, how should Trump, or any world leader for that matter, distinguish between those gatherings worth endorsing and those worth passing?
|
|
The team has used what's known as the "band-ratio" colour technique in order to distinguish between areas on Titan's surface.
|
|
Only human agents, however, because they have the ability to understand and grasp meaning, can distinguish between meaningful and meaningless correlations.
|
|
"It takes years of experience to be able to distinguish between something that's old and something that's recently manufactured," Defrin said.
|
|
To be clear, it's difficult to distinguish between publicity stunts and reality TV moments when it comes to the Kardashians' lives.
|
|
Their lessons focus on how to distinguish between factual and fictional news — and why they should care that there's a difference.
|
|
The administration is seeking to distinguish between jurisdictions that are active partners in supporting federal policies against those that are obstructionist.
|
|
" Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh said the two rulings required judges to distinguish between "someone who's merely immature as opposed to incorrigible.
|
|
One of the major tasks of this center is to distinguish between rebel and extremist targets inside the zone of cooperation.
|
|
Part of the reason for this move is to firmly distinguish between the work of CyberCom and the National Security Agency.
|
|
It also cannot distinguish between proteins that might make people healthier and those that people may have because they are healthy.
|
|
Trying to distinguish between gigantic corporations that bring value to consumers from gigantic corporations that don't is ultimately a mug's game.
|
|
In any case, there is always an unacknowledged uncanny aspect to sound recordings, which don't distinguish between dead and living voices.
|
|
In circumstances like these, it's important to distinguish between actual deceit and (as you put it) talking in a nuanced way.
|
|
Net zero targets do not distinguish between the reduction of fossil fuel emissions and the removal of carbon from the atmosphere.
|
|
But without rigorous laboratory testing, it's nearly impossible to distinguish between a real N95 or KN95 mask and a counterfeit one.
|
|
Mooney taught us how to quickly distinguish between a stab wound from a blunt weapon and one from a sharp tip.
|
|
That could put store employees in the difficult position of trying to distinguish between troublemakers and law-abiding citizens with guns.
|
|
That premise always has been false and, as a result, courts have struggled to distinguish between commercial and non-commercial speech.
|
|
"We cannot have rule of law if law schools do not distinguish between constrained governance and lawless executive power," she added.
|
|
Previous research has mainly involved elephants in captivity, and earlier observational data doesn't always distinguish between resting times and actual sleep.
|
|
Memories are beginning to confuse and drive the Hosts — Dolores declares that she can't even distinguish between memories and reality anymore.
|
|
But unlike adults who can distinguish between parody and mischief and the real thing, the algorithm can't yet tell the difference.
|
|
Scholars, journalists, and other experts can help distinguish between partisan policy proposals and administrative changes that threaten the constitution and republic.
|
|
Santo Domingo did not distinguish between the high and low in culture, which is what gives the LSD Library such depth.
|
|
The device, called MasSpec Pen, isn't perfect yet, however; it can distinguish between cancerous and healthy tissue with about 96 percent accuracy.
|
|
You don't distinguish between something you're deeply involved in versus something where you just have a sort of passing interest in it?
|
|
But they know these channels will help distinguish between differences in the atmosphere like clouds, water vapor, smoke, ice and volcanic ash.
|
|
Bernie Sanders was asked how he would distinguish between sex work and sex trafficking, an issue of particular relevance to people here.
|
|
"I will impose sovereignty, but I will not distinguish between settlement blocs and isolated settlements," he said, per an Associated Press translation.
|
|
Police are keen for a way to distinguish between who's smoked weed in the last few weeks and who's high right now.
|
|
I'd also like to see Google clean up the app launcher so it's easier to distinguish between Android apps and Chrome apps.
|
|
He tried to distinguish between Loving and Brown, saying they were "long-standing" and "well-accepted" precedents unlikely to come up again.
|
|
Many of them don't even distinguish between ISIS and al Qaeda, even though the two groups are at war with each other.
|
|
"You need to always distinguish between reality and the shop window," said Andrei Frolov, editor-in-chief of Russian magazine Arms Exports.
|
|
They found out that mice can distinguish between social behaviors—and that they prefer seeing fighting to sex, unless drugs are involved.
|
|
They sought to distinguish between growth traps and the natural slowdown that any country can expect as it converges with leading economies.
|
|
By default, Placemeter can now distinguish between five different objects: people, bicycles, motorcycles, cars and large vehicles (think trucks, delivery vans, etc.).
|
|
In the murky world of Islamist terrorism, it's hard to distinguish between trained operatives and lone wolves who act almost on impulse.
|
|
It's important to distinguish between the two categories, and one of the things that happens with elite failure is it conflates them.
|
|
Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said it was important to distinguish between "terrorists", rebel fighters and up to three million civilians in Idlib.
|
|
The disagreement stems from a Clinton campaign decision, affirmed by President Obama, to distinguish between Trump and Republicanism as an electoral strategy.
|
|
Research, including Woolley's own, shows that kids can begin to distinguish between reality and fantasy between the ages of 3 and 5.
|
|
With this setup in place, Chaves's team came up with a way to distinguish between a classical causal model and quantum mechanics.
|
|
The bill, called the Deceptive Experiences To Online Users Reduction (DETOUR) Act, does not distinguish between mobile apps and desktop browsing experiences.
|
|
Apparently, goats are able to distinguish between positive and negative emotions in other goats' calls and react to their fellows goats' feelings.
|
|
LAEL BRAINARD: So I think on the balance sheet, it's really important to distinguish between the overall technical factors and monetary policy.
|
|
Project Maven is a military project focused on how machine learning can be used to help drones distinguish between people and objects.
|
|
" In an apparent attempt to distinguish between North Korea's leadership and ordinary people, he said he thought North Koreans were "great people.
|
|
The sleep tracker is extremely optimistic, the fitness tracker can't distinguish between different kinds of exercise, and the app isn't very attractive.
|
|
"His advisers didn't know whether he was an isolationist or a militarist, or whether he could distinguish between the two," Wolff writes.
|
|
Traders and analysts often distinguish between changes in the structure of prices ("curve") and changes in the outright price level ("flat price").
|
|
That makes it really tough for astronomers to distinguish between a star's light and the light being reflected off a nearby planet.
|
|
In fact, according to Nina Rosenstein, executive vice president of HBO Programming, HBO doesn't distinguish between web series and non-web series.
|
|
Overall, though, the findings suggest adult dogs can accurately distinguish between behaviors and associate those behaviors with the people who perform them.
|
|
Hearing aids can help amplify sound, but this doesn't necessarily help you distinguish between words when there's a lot of background noise.
|
|
Under the law of armed conflict, the military must always clearly distinguish between combatants and civilians, and journalists are classed as civilians.
|
|
"To debate and condemn racism with some level of understanding, we'd need to, at a minimum, distinguish between these things," Freelon says.
|
|
The scalpel can distinguish between the different vibrations, and immediately provide both audio and visual feedback to the surgeon who's wielding it.
|
|
Not only do these colors help you distinguish between each strap, but they make the basket muzzle look less threatening to others.
|
|
The current departmental review process for approving travel also does not adequately distinguish between personal, political and official travel, the watchdog concluded.
|
|
The Espionage Act makes no distinction regarding the reasons for disclosing classified information, nor does it distinguish between the levels of classification.
|
|
Owen, whose schizophrenia is alternately presented as a genuine condition and as a metaphor, can't distinguish between what's real and what's not.
|
|
However, Singh's case appears to show that technology was not advanced enough in 2018 to distinguish between a photograph and a face.
|
|
The amount involved could be one means to distinguish between more serious violations and those that usually result in a civil action.
|
|
" In an apparent attempt to distinguish between North Korea's leadership and ordinary people, he said he thought North Koreans were "great people.
|
|
In all this, the Treasury is instructed to distinguish between what can be done by administrative action and what would require legislation.
|
|
It is critical to distinguish between groups opposing changes to laws on guest workers and groups opposing changes to laws on immigration.
|
|
He said the terrorists killed innocent people, did not distinguish between children, youth or elders, and the attack was a war crime.
|
|
Perhaps a flood of furious auto-babble will force future readers to distinguish between the illusion of coherence and the genuine article.
|
|
Of course, Rose cuts her down; in the grand tradition of egomaniacal, domineering artists, she refuses to distinguish between tribute and challenge.
|
|
But the agency itself sometimes can't even distinguish between an advertisement and a normal post—underscoring how muddled the two have become.
|
|
Mammography is just X-ray, so it can't distinguish between a cyst and a tumor like the MRI with our processing can.
|
|
The SEC has crossed the line from the former to the latter, largely because it can't seem to distinguish between the two.
|
|
Most cops, like the sheriff's deputies in San Joaquin, aren't often inclined to distinguish between hemp and will-get-you-stoned marijuana.
|
|
Activists and organizers distinguish between the actual protests, the activism they inspired, and the national group called the Women's March, she said.
|
|
There, Mr. Ali "directed, and participated in, a brutal counterinsurgency campaign that refused to distinguish between civilians and combatants," the complaint said.
|
|
Both tastes unsettle us, and some languages barely distinguish between them; in Tahitian one word ('ava'ava) encompasses bitter, sour and even salty.
|
|
The most important step is to distinguish between industries that are relatively easy to "reshore" and ramp up and those that aren't.
|
|
Somehow, we are unable to distinguish between people who actually engage in terrorist activity and who do not engage in terrorist activity.
|
|
Judge Goodman concluded there's no reason to distinguish between written notes and memos and an oral recounting of the same substantive information.
|
|
Students were asked to determine when written evidence supported a particular claim and to distinguish between fact and opinion, among other tasks.
|
|
Mr. Mélenchon almost doubled his 2012 result, refused to concede for hours and then attacked both finalists, refusing to distinguish between them.
|
|
The senior administration official said the US would distinguish between small sales and major purchases as it considered whether to apply sanctions.
|
|
The current departmental review process for approving travel also does not adequately distinguish between personal, political and official travel, the watchdog concluded.
|
|
And remember: our tenth question every week seeks to help you distinguish between satirical, "fake" news, and real New York Times headlines.
|
|
Researchers say they've taught self-driving car software to distinguish between selfish and considerate human drivers in the space of two seconds.
|
|
Your son is old enough to distinguish between the parent who cares about others, and the parent who cares only about himself.
|
|
Here, however, it will also be important for the American president to carefully distinguish between genuine enemy irrationality and pretended enemy irrationality.
|
|
But McDaniel was also very clear to distinguish between Wynn, a longtime major Republican donor, and Harvey Weinstein, a massive Democratic giver.
|
|
"Physicists long ago learned to distinguish between what can be publicly available and what's classified," he added, referring to nuclear weapons research.
|
|
"Algorithms cannot distinguish between actual copyright infringements and the perfectly legal re-use of content for purposes such as parody," she said.
|
|
But it is important to distinguish between cheating, which is an individual or group effort, and a rigged election, which is systemic.
|
|
The problem, she continued, is that courts don't distinguish between legal procedures that are a veneer and those that are actually effective.
|
|
The current and former athletes speaking out against U.S.A. Gymnastics have made a point to distinguish between the organization and the sport.
|
|
Pinkerton also notes that this new study fails to distinguish between women who have many hot flashes and those who have very few.
|
|
Researcher Hui-Shyong Yeo says the current challenge facing the team is getting the system to distinguish between intentional and unintentional nose scratches.
|
|
The suit accuses Ali of directing a "brutal counterinsurgency campaign that refused to distinguish between civilians and combatants" between about 1984 and 1989.
|
|
BitTorrent, the company, sought to distinguish between the BitTorrent protocol and piracy sites, and said it did not host nor promote pirated content.
|
|
Take our quiz below and see if you can distinguish between the mind of a computer, and the mind of a marmalade-lover.
|
|
Sharp enough to distinguish between real gunshots and firecrackers or other loud noises, the sensors also transmit the location of gunfire they detect.
|
|
And its measures of health (stunting and survival rates) are too crude to distinguish between Singapore's healthy population and Finland's even healthier one.
|
|
Conventional antibiotics do not distinguish between good and bad bacteria, eradicating everything indiscriminately and occasionally creating problems for people with weakened immune systems.
|
|
Each mosquito species has a characteristic wing-beat frequency and the beam-detector inside a cell is sensitive enough to distinguish between these.
|
|
Engadget says HTC claims the U11 Eyes' camera can distinguish between a real human face and those shown on a photo or video.
|
|
Sex robots for pedophiles could help them with repressed urges, but it's also possible, they write, some won't distinguish between fact and fantasy.
|
|
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on a conference call it was important to distinguish between "family relations" and repeated instances of violence.
|
|
It was by including gay men and women in her sample that Dr DeBruine thought she might be able to distinguish between them.
|
|
The rats' accuracy at detecting TB is almost 100 percent, but they cannot distinguish between normal and drug-resistant strains, APOPO scientists say.
|
|
Under new regulations in China, all paid advertisements must be clearly marked in search results to distinguish between organic search results and advertisements.
|
|
The small differences in how the gold and aluminum in the tongue absorbed light enabled researchers to distinguish between different kinds of whiskies.
|
|
Because ideally, we would live in a world where there would be no discrimination and no need to distinguish between homosexual and heterosexual.
|
|
The information is then relayed to a control room, where trained operators are often required to distinguish between false alarms and real leaks.
|
|
We can also expect an upgrade to Siri, perhaps a new version that can distinguish between different voices and maintain multiple user profiles.
|
|
The change should make it easier to distinguish between nonprofits and get a clear sense of how your donation could make an impact.
|
|
So lyrically, how much of Noun comes from a personal versus a political position, or is it impossible to distinguish between the two?
|
|
Scientists have mimicked the taste receptors on a human tongue to distinguish between more than 30 different kinds of whiskey, The Verge reports.
|
|
They're also great problem solvers, using tools to dig for water underneath the ground, and they can even distinguish between different human languages.
|
|
By learning to distinguish between different types of sex they see around them, kids will develop much healthier attitudes toward sex and relationships.
|
|
It's hard to distinguish between self-memorialisation, mythology and commercial intent, since in the Rolling Stones' case they are all so closely aligned.
|
|
This makes it hard to distinguish between what he's doing to be thorough and what he's doing because it's central to the investigation.
|
|
But it may be more difficult than Amazon executives realized for the site's users to distinguish between open educational resources and copyrighted works.
|
|
An algorithm would not have the capacity to distinguish between stolen copyrighted material versus creative content using copyrighted material to progress the conversation.
|
|
It showed the Trump team struggling to distinguish between supporters and opponents on the Republican central committee of Hamilton County, which includes Cincinnati.
|
|
They must also be willing to distinguish between existential threats to democracy and issues that, while important, belong nevertheless to second-order concerns.
|
|
"You have to distinguish between a child who is misguided and frustrated from home issues, and a child who is dangerous," she said.
|
|
If the U.S. does not distinguish between legitimate grievances and immaterial accusations, a successful resolution to this conflict with China will prove elusive.
|
|
It's important to distinguish between true science and politically motivated individuals who are simply invoking science-sounding terminology to justify a predetermined outcome.
|
|
The study noted that its symptoms are similar to Alzheimer's disease, and doctors have struggled to distinguish between Alzheimer's and CTE in patients.
|
|
They suggest that past research may have missed this effect because it could not distinguish between higher-paid and lower-paid restaurant workers.
|
|
" Another security researcher explained: "Android is such a mess that you have to distinguish between the Google devices and the zoo of others.
|
|
Pelosi doesn't agree, arguing strongly that the public won't distinguish between an impeachment inquiry and Democrats all-out trying to impeach the president.
|
|
Campaigners note that law enforcement agencies may struggle to distinguish between an individual using cannabis for medicinal purposes and somebody using cannabis recreationally.
|
|
Only marginally, given that this pitiful follow-up to last year's "Bad Moms" is even less able to distinguish between crass and comedic.
|
|
The researchers said their methods could be used to distinguish between temporary color loss and the washed-out appearance of truly bad fish.
|
|
Epstein contrasts "quackery" with "legitimate research," and "craziness" with "serious science," but the crucial question of how to distinguish between them is unaddressed.
|
|
It will also be important for them to distinguish between what is beyond their control and what they might be able to control.
|
|
But we have to make sure that men are included in this conversation, and that we distinguish between hardened predators and lesser offenses.
|
|
In 2019, the system had an accuracy rate of 1% and it even failed to distinguish between boys and girls, the group said.
|
|
But it did not distinguish between a train that was a minute or two late from a train that was 30 minutes late.
|
|
Hitler was particularly taken with the economics lecture of Gottfried Feder, who taught him to distinguish between productive (national) and unproductive (Jewish) capital.
|
|
However, county election officials often fail to distinguish between people on parole and those on prohibition, leading numerous people to be illegally disenfranchised.
|
|
First quarter numbers from residential firms show that overall deal volume is up, though they do not distinguish between domestic and foreign buyers.
|
|
The anonymity of the internet, he added, makes it difficult to distinguish between ordinary people voicing their genuine opinions and state-sponsored trolls.
|
|
When it is hard to distinguish between the private and public sectors, it is hard to work out what counts as a subsidy.
|
|
A campaign is underway for the law to distinguish between those growing small amounts, particularly for medical purposes, and those growing it commercially.
|
|
But it's important to distinguish between actual consumer sentiment and some of the social media reaction that does not represent the majority opinion.
|
|
Pinker says constant fear-mongering can make it harder for the human brain to correctly distinguish between a legitimate and a false threat.
|
|
Mr. Downes said he doesn't see how the Justice Department would distinguish between the two deals, should it approve the Fox-Disney transaction.
|
|
To the Editor: I am puzzled by the press's frequent failure to distinguish between asylum seekers and illegal entrants into the United States.
|
|
Now you might ask, well why do I distinguish between people working and not, and the answer is because the politics requires that.
|
|
"Sole proprietors can't neatly distinguish between their individual actions and their business activities," Brian Hauss, a staff attorney at the ACLU, told me.
|
|
For quite a while I tried to distinguish between "Velvet"—my sex worker persona—and the person I am in my private life.
|
|
Cherry used a "winner take all" approach to allow DNA neural nets to distinguish between numbers by synthesizing a so-called "annihilator" molecule.
|
|
And you're talking about how wired Seoul is and you met many 22015-somethings who did not distinguish between online life and real life.
|
|
The bill further does not distinguish between federal officers handling the border crisis and federal law enforcement pursuing the ordinary course of their duties.
|
|
"Unfortunately, we did not evolve a Baloney Detection Network in the brain to distinguish between true and false patterns," he wrote in Scientific American.
|
|
Supposedly, the system AI had yet to distinguish between humans and animals, and heaps of dead critters were piling up around the fortified walls.
|
|
Another limitation is that accelerometers used in the study didn't distinguish between standing time and sitting, which might have different health effects, researchers note.
|
|
To distinguish between the two, Dr Mama put some volunteers through what is known as the Stroop test while they were standing or sitting.
|
|
But Sony's made it a bit tougher to distinguish between the newest A43 models, so I've put them head-to-head for this comparison.
|
|
"This report doesn't distinguish between endocrine action and endocrine disruption," said Dr. Joseph Perrone, chief science officer for the Center for Accountability in Science.
|
|
Details differ, but many European countries, including Ireland, Malta and Belgium, made it illegal to distinguish between trans and cis people in everyday life.
|
|
It was PPK's failure to distinguish between private business interests and public responsibility that had rendered him vulnerable to impeachment in the first place.
|
|
Doi now believes that the model is accurate enough to be able to distinguish between cuts of meat and the placement of the toppings.
|
|
So we have to distinguish between the Russians and their government, because, just like many Americans, they are just kind of pawns in this.
|
|
Right-wing advocacy groups represented in court argued that Israeli law does not distinguish between boycotts of the settlements and boycotts of Israel itself.
|
|
One thing customers may notice is the addition of reCAPTCHA on the website, which is used to distinguish between human and software login attempts.
|
|
According to the study, 82 percent of students could not distinguish between a sponsored post and an actual news article on the same website.
|
|
Or maybe you revel at the thought of being unable to distinguish between the saccharine fruit of your labor and your candy-coated lunch.
|
|
Twin schoolgirls in pioneer-style kerchiefs battle a series of mirages; deceitful mirrors make it hard for them to distinguish between heroes and villains.
|
|
In his testimony at the trial, Weeks described being unable to coherently distinguish between simple tasks, such as driving and reversing in a car.
|
|
On more trivial issues, the level of discussion has become simply inane, as Click Hole and the real web become harder to distinguish between.
|
|
It has proved nearly impossible to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate documents, all of them officially issued by the state of Texas decades ago.
|
|
Public pollsters don't usually record the nationality of Hispanics, which might have allowed us to distinguish between, say, voters of Dominican and Mexican ancestry.
|
|
The Federal Election Commission would surely take it upon itself to distinguish between legitimate and illegitimate news sources, and between real and fake news.
|
|
"State law also does not distinguish between documented and undocumented graduates of Texas high schools in admissions and financial aid decisions," the statement said.
|
|
The Democratic-Republicans prevailed, but here's where it gets tricky: At the time, votes did not distinguish between candidates for president and vice president.
|
|
In 2018, Uber did not have the technology to distinguish between a paper photograph of a person and a selfie of the actual person.
|
|
It is often difficult for artificial intelligence systems to distinguish between educational videos about atrocities and content that is promoting those acts of violence.
|
|
The sudden jump in quakes, officials said, led the USGS to distinguish between natural and man-made quakes for the first time this year.
|
|
"I do think it's very important that we distinguish between the rapists and assaulters and the clueless fumblers and the tactless remarkers," she said.
|
|
Consumers can be easily overwhelmed by the available data and be unable to distinguish between good medical practices and a sales pitch, he said.
|
|
There is no easy way to distinguish between a musician who spouts "prepackaged doctrine" and one who boldly stands up for what is right.
|
|
And that could make it difficult for spacecraft to distinguish between an alien life form on another planet — or a stowaway microbe from Earth.
|
|
What's being incorporated into the IQ is more advanced: It can distinguish between faces and remember faces that have been labeled by the user.
|
|
In this Democratic primary, it can be difficult to distinguish between the candidates' various criminal justice reform proposals—but at least they have them.
|
|
All yellows are not alike, but without the need to distinguish between yellows and the linguistic tools to do so, people just see yellow.
|
|
"We need the president to be able to distinguish between our allies and adversaries, and to treat each accordingly," he said in a statement.
|
|
To have a meaningful discussion on the effect of sanctions, it is crucial to distinguish between the causes of a phenomenon and its remedies.
|
|
Trump did not distinguish between the Dow and Nasdaq, but the latter would have been the most accurate when he was referring to percentages.
|
|
"You can distinguish between the more cautious corporate strategy of firms versus the unadulterated view of people who work in those firms," Cain said.
|
|
JWST's 21-foot-wide beryllium mirror and new infrared technology will enable it to distinguish between different molecules in the atmospheres of faraway planets.
|
|
The question is how exactly to distinguish between trading connected to clients, which is permitted, and trading that amounts to speculation, which is banned.
|
|
For the first time ever, consumers will be able to distinguish between naturally-occurring sugars and those that are "added" during packaging or processing.
|
|
When we are deprived of contact with these ancestral bacterial allies, our immune systems sometimes lose the ability to distinguish between friend and foe.
|
|
Clinton also faced — and Trump had the advantage of — news media that couldn't distinguish between ordinary, if unseemly, political misconduct and truly extraordinary transgressions.
|
|
In a May report focused on the local retail sector, PWC noted that it was "almost impossible to distinguish" between the two areas today.
|
|
"We specifically built techniques in the deep learning framework to learn and distinguish between these different patterns and sizes of the geoglyphs," said Sakurai.
|
|
His center often helps children distinguish between the possible and the probable, to help put anxiety about frightening but rare events in proper context.
|
|
"It grants the fantasy you have of them power," says Coates — and it's often difficult to distinguish between the fantasy and the real thing.
|
|
I know my inability to distinguish between negative and positive attention doesn't speak well for my sense of self-worth, but so it goes.
|
|
But it's crucial to distinguish between which investigation is being discussed, because they'll each correspond with different investigators and different goals, means, and powers.
|
|
To speak of artistic coefficients, Wright suggests, is to distinguish between extraterritorial conceptualizations of art that, in practice, bleed into other fields and areas.
|
|
Cherry began his experiment by building a neural net that could distinguish between handwritten sixes and sevens that had been translated into molecular structures.
|
|
"It may be the case that foreigners are less able to distinguish between legal and illegal pieces of land," Ondetti told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
|
|
The researchers then spent three days training the ravens to distinguish between two wooden boxes, one containing a cheese treat and one that remained empty.
|
|
Additionally, Trump's failure to distinguish between campaign collusion and Russia's blatant attack on our democracy allowed Putin to sow more discord during the press conference.
|
|
Washington has become something of a hall of mirrors, where it's difficult to distinguish between rumor and fact as conspiracy theories and partisan paroxysms rage.
|
|
It also did a clinical trial with 600 other participants to ensure it could distinguish between a normal heartbeat, or sinus rhythm, and atrial fibrillation.
|
|
According to Leachman and Merlino, it is not known whether the artificial intelligence system featured in the new study can distinguish between similar-looking diseases.
|
|
In rooms that are packed with fake plants and covered in Egyptian murals, the brain loses its capacity to distinguish between reality and make-believe.
|
|
Tesla said it has various ways to protect against pedal misapplication, including using its Autopilot sensors to distinguish between erroneous pedal application and normal cases.
|
|
"Learning to distinguish between the internal image of an ex and the actual person can lead to appreciation of our own loving feelings," Braucher writes.
|
|
Epictetus' stoic philosophy says our chief task in life is to distinguish between what is in our control and what is not in our control.
|
|
This includes NLP and voice analytics, and things like relationship mapping and measurement, so that Behavox is able to distinguish between different types of activity.
|
|
What's more, bots haven't been around long enough for users to be savvy enough to distinguish between those from legitimate sources and potential bad actors.
|
|
So, it was only a matter of time before Jimmy Fallon and Jimmy Kimmel did a public service announcement to help people distinguish between them.
|
|
Hulu can't distinguish between ads and content on all networks, so you're not restricted everywhere, but most of the big channels fall under this rule.
|
|
Jimmy wanted to see if the Big American Cookbook author could distinguish between a very expensive vintage wine and wine that comes in a box.
|
|
"This is really the first membrane shown to distinguish between subatomic particles, all at room temperature," explains Dr Marcelo Lozada-Hidalgo in a press release.
|
|
More importantly, media content is increasingly being encountered via algorithmically driven tech platforms — whose AIs apparently can't distinguish between deliberately skewed disinformation and genuine reportage.
|
|
Xiaomi says it doesn't distinguish between Chinese and foreign users when designing MIUI, but some features are inevitably going to target the company's home market.
|
|
He used this to "see" what he wanted to paint and to distinguish between oil paints, because each color had a different viscosity and texture.
|
|
Like President Barack Obama at the Democratic National Convention, Clinton was careful to distinguish between mainstream Republicans and Trump, portraying the nominee as an aberration.
|
|
It can be hard to distinguish between the two — especially in the federal judiciary, where judges are appointed and where their interests aren't always apparent.
|
|
We can't distinguish between real news and fake news because we don't even question the credibility of the source of news when we are online.
|
|
Some distinguish between explicit conversion therapy and "ex-gay" organizations such as the National Association for Research & Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH), which Dr. Nicolosi founded.
|
|
Perhaps then we can distinguish between collaborators of aspiration, inspired by a desire for gain, and collaborators of aversion, inspired by a fear of loss.
|
|
Facebook's News Feed changes, meanwhile, have a similar problem because they don't appear to distinguish between local news reporting and user posts about local events.
|
|
"With that said, it is important to distinguish between criticizing a military action by a government and attacking a particular people of faith," Omar wrote.
|
|
Many who support the Palestinians now seem genuinely unable to distinguish between criticizing the policies of the Israeli government and sowing hatred against a people.
|
|
In order to distinguish between Internet fabulists and dangerous individuals, the agency conducts sting operations with paid informants and undercover agents posing as ISIS supporters.
|
|
Amazon reviews these video recordings to improve the performance of its Cloud Cam, helping it to better distinguish between an intruder and normal household activity.
|
|
The studies also used different questions about leisure-time physical activity, and two surveys didn't have enough information to distinguish between potential gender-related differences.
|
|
HRW said it was "disappointing that the Israeli government seems unable or unwilling to distinguish between justified criticisms of its actions and hostile political propaganda".
|
|
But in exercising this prerogative, the administration would do well to soberly distinguish between spending that is truly essential, from spending which is truly not.
|
|
The platform is also figuring out how to distinguish between data points describing 10 offenders at a company or one individual who committed 10 offenses.
|
|
In a coffee shop scenario, the system was able to distinguish between users from within the store and intruders from outside 97% of the time.
|
|
Police officers in Orlando, Florida, recently learned how to carefully distinguish between the two substances when they accidentally arrested Daniel Rushing, 64, for drug possession.
|
|
Turkey - along with the United Nations - also classifies Tahrir al-Sham as a terrorist group, but says any action should distinguish between it and civilians.
|
|
Nonetheless, it is critical to distinguish between actual threats to our communities and manufactured ones that are not designed to serve our own best interests.
|
|
Monika Bickert, Facebook's head of global policy management, says Facebook tries to distinguish between generalized vitriol and vitriol that is directed at a specific person.
|
|
Moscow has now learned to distinguish between Trump's words, which the Russians see as a tactic designed to throw opponents off balance, and his deeds.
|
|
Their signs can distinguish between police use of pepper spray and tear gas, warn of danger and even ask for specific medical supplies and equipment.
|
|
Alexandra Ellerbeck, the North America program coordinator for Committee to Protect Journalists, said the law must distinguish between those who covered demonstrations and the participants.
|
|
At the same time, it's hard to distinguish between the very handsome suits worn by Milo Ventimiglia and Aziz Ansari and Liev Schreiber last night.
|
|
It can create information overload, overwhelming people so it becomes harder to distinguish between what's real and what's fake, which prompts them to give up.
|
|
Especially in the context of the coronavirus, a pandemic threat that demands unity rather than racism, as it does not distinguish between nations or religions.
|
|
Challenges including trying to distinguish between Dom Pérignon and Andre Strawberry Sparkling Wine; winners were rewarded with rhinoplasties, breast augmentations, jowl lifts, and thigh tucks.
|
|
Which is a priority for you, and how you kind of distinguish between the two as a politician given that they essentially affect different constituencies?
|
|
We would only get into dubious territory if the statement was in double quotes, even though the average reader would never distinguish between the two.
|
|
Radar can be unreliable when the ice water is muddied by sediment, and some spectroscopic analyses couldn't necessarily distinguish between water and plain old hydrogen.
|
|
Writing in Applied Acoustics, Dr van Ruth's team show they can distinguish between sand samples retrieved (legally) from nine seaside spots along the Dutch coast.
|
|
Some of the cases, as in the Maplewood incidents, do not distinguish between the victim of the violence and the person accused of perpetrating it.
|
|
Still, it can be hard to distinguish between enterprises that are legally considered fraudulent and those which aren't, and no specific statute outlaws pyramid schemes.
|
|
In the world of mutually assured disruption, more than ever before what matters is the capacity to distinguish between state-inspired and state-run subversion.
|
|
But in recent years, BMI has come under scrutiny because it doesn't distinguish between fat and muscle, which can be an issue for athletic people.
|
|
Linguists had to devise ways to distinguish between sounds, like different ways of pronouncing "r", without using diacritics, which add an extra step in typing.
|
|
Placing a seismometer at each location allowed the researchers to distinguish between vibrations coming from the swaying of the tower and the ground around it.
|
|
Indigenous protesters say Moreno, who has been careful to distinguish between violent troublemakers and his "indigenous brothers", is nevertheless trying to de-legitimize their demands.
|
|
"You'd need to be experienced to distinguish between the surgeries done properly and the technique is the most up-to-date and safe," he said.
|
|
In particular, we are struck by his repeated failure to distinguish between reality and fantasy, and his outbursts of rage when his fantasies are contradicted.
|
|
Compounding the author's challenge is the need to distinguish between speculation, ideas that might be verified in the future, and what is just fanciful thinking.
|
|
They described Mr. Hernandez as having a low I.Q. and a personality disorder that made it difficult for him to distinguish between reality and fantasy.
|
|
" The statement goes on to distinguish between the "heavenly" policeman and "earthly" policeman, emphasizing how the earthly policeman takes actions that "break our world apart.
|
|
Another limitation of the BMJ study is that it can't distinguish between researchers' career stages, and only includes scientists working predominantly in health and medicine.
|
|
Users open to a hybrid solution can try the company's "quality filter," which was built to distinguish between good and abusive mentions using software algorithms.
|
|
So, we can't distinguish between the two, and I think the results are entirely consistent with it being at least in some part the latter.
|
|
But with every new brand that enters this crowded market the harder it becomes to distinguish between tequilas of genuine quality and not-so-cheap imitations.
|
|
Though they legally operate as independent manufacturers, after nearly two decades working together it can be difficult to distinguish between Nissan and Renault in many areas.
|
|
Andrew Crocker, a lawyer at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said that courts need to clearly distinguish between accessing private areas of someone's computer and public folders.
|
|
The PRA specifically does not distinguish between personal and work efforts, and the last provision of the law prohibits personal communications unless there is government redundancy.
|
|
Flynn has a track record that includes not only questionable dealings with Russia, but also a troubling inability to distinguish between Islamic radicals and everyday Muslims.
|
|
It would not make any sense for Congress to distinguish between the two groups if someone enforcing a security interest is a debt collector, he said.
|
|
And yet, an investigation into home DNA testing kits by NBC Chicago found that at least one DNA testing company could not distinguish between the two.
|
|
Many cybersecurity companies try to stay one step ahead of attacks and breaches by attempting to distinguish between good and bad traffic coming across a network.
|
|
The company is working on a new feature that would allow its voice-enabled assistant to distinguish between different voices, according to a report form Time.
|
|
In a new paper Ufuk Akcigit, Salomé Baslandze and Francesca Lotti try to distinguish between such malign purposes and benign ones in the case of Italy.
|
|
On Wednesday, Twitter's head of product, Kayvon Beykpour, clarified that this isn't a partisan policy and that Twitter's algorithms don't look to distinguish between political parties.
|
|
Google Home now supports up to six different accounts on one device and can distinguish between the voices of different users, the company announced on Thursday.
|
|
To make matters worse, this lingo makes it difficult to distinguish between genuine investment professionals and salespeople with inherent conflicts of interest and lack of training.
|
|
The study authors wrote that their computer algorithm could distinguish between gay and straight men 81% of the time, and 74% of the time with women.
|
|
This might allow a natural-language system to distinguish between pianos and church organs on one hand, and livers and other internal organs on the other.
|
|
Psychologists distinguish between "fluid intelligence", which is the ability to solve new problems, and "crystallised intelligence", which roughly equates to an individual's stock of accumulated knowledge.
|
|
It can verify if the information you send someone is accurate and distinguish between a typo and whether you're trying to fool someone [on an application].
|
|
The feature cannot yet distinguish between individual voices, so it's not possible to only limit those features when it hears a kid's voice asking for them.
|
|
In the short term, this lens could help food and drug manufactures easily distinguish between, say, the artificial sweeter Aspartame and its bitter, wrong-handed doppelgänger.
|
|
Players called that information &apos&apospatently false&apos&apos and said it failed to distinguish between money paid by USA Hockey and the U.S. Olympic Committee.
|
|
The instructions do not distinguish between violent crimes and more minor infractions, such as traffic offences or immigration crimes, which include crossing into America without permission.
|
|
Still many policymakers are careful to not implicate the energy industry directly, making pains to distinguish between the drilling process and the storing of its byproduct.
|
|
I believe in the power of art, and I believe in the power of Love, and I do not necessarily have to distinguish between the two.
|
|
This in turn enabled researchers to distinguish between the two types of melanin in samples, because there were subtle differences in he concentrations between the two.
|
|
This happens because after enough time surfing, people no longer can distinguish between things that may have flashed before their eyes and things they actually know.
|
|
It's like saying that if you can identify an unlimited number of lines in an image, you can distinguish between all objects using just one layer.
|
|
The second step is learning more about the problem, who is affected, how interactions become engagement, and how to distinguish between positive engagement and negative ones.
|
|
It's important to keep Donald Trump's awfulness in perspective, to distinguish between what is the result of broader historical forces and what is unique to him.
|
|
While Otis doesn't seem to distinguish between them, the reader can — we see their names and witness the aftermath — thus restoring a sense of their humanity.
|
|
At times, such correspondence may be sensitive or confidential, and the FOIA provides a way to distinguish between "agency records" and "congressional records" in those circumstances.
|
|
But social media has become so advanced that young people may not necessarily distinguish between what happens in person and what happens in the online world.
|
|
Even in countries that no longer discriminate directly against children of unmarried parents, laws that distinguish between married and cohabiting couples may harm them (see article).
|
|
When the White House decides to make its visitor log private and muzzle federal employees, citizens need a neutral place to distinguish between fact and fiction.
|
|
The FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting system fails to distinguish between certain levels of gun violence, especially when someone is threatened with a gun but isn't wounded.
|
|
Why it matters: The research team, based at Heidelberg University in Germany, says the technology might eventually be used to distinguish between fake and real drugs.
|
|
We distinguish between feed and surfaces where you've taken the choice to follow somebody, and Explore and hashtag pages where Instagram is recommending content to people.
|
|
According to a study published Thursday in Science, honey bees can distinguish between zero and other numbers, and even exhibited similar patterns of recognition to humans.
|
|
"It's important to distinguish between my role in Vampire Weekend as a producer and my role on this album as a songwriter," he said during dinner.
|
|
A category for added sugars will help consumers distinguish between sugar from fruits and vegetables, which comes with nutrients, and sugar that provides only empty calories.
|
|
This year, an Audi executive mused upon how difficult it would be for a driverless car to distinguish between a shopping cart and a baby carriage.
|
|
The job was trying—the countess, as countesses do, failed to distinguish between "employee" and "servant," and was given to shouting—but fruitful for Egan's craft.
|
|
Yet even if the will toward art and the will to deceive others can be closely aligned, we readily distinguish between the liar and the littérateur.
|
|
International humanitarian law, which the United States helped establish, prohibits deliberate attacks on civilians and indiscriminate attacks, which do not distinguish between military targets and civilians.
|
|
Airbnb said the new rules were complex and confusing as they did not distinguish between local families sharing their homes and professional operators running a business.
|
|
The International Monetary Fund provides tested ways to identify currency manipulation, accepted by countries worldwide, that distinguish between legitimate central bank demand management and currency manipulation.
|
|
More broadly, as a matter of policy, Twitter does not even distinguish between such foreign agents, their employees, and the rest of the Twitter user base.
|
|
It is obvious that we must distinguish between the recurring deaths of individual members of the human race and the collective death of the race itself.
|
|
When the ferries are finished, commuters will not be able to distinguish between the two companies' products, said Josh Stickles, the marketing director for Metal Shark.
|
|
There are enough people with a tendency for violence that cannot distinguish between political stagecraft and practical exhortations to rescue the country by any available means.
|
|
IPVideo, which makes a number of cameras and other gadgets for schools, sells a Halo detector that also claims to distinguish between THC and nicotine vapor.
|
|
The line between a conservative opinion and straight propaganda has become exceedingly thin, to the point that it is often difficult to distinguish between the two.
|
|
Or to monitor activity in an industrial workshop environment where the system is able to distinguish between different tools in use — with obvious potential safety benefits.
|
|
They found that the control volunteers were able to distinguish between different textures 77 percent of the time; Sorensen answered correctly 96 percent of the time.
|
|
"I am going to extend (Israeli) sovereignty and I don't distinguish between settlement blocs and the isolated settlements," he told Israel's Channel 12 News on Saturday.
|
|
A nonpartisan effort called The Trust Project is working to address this situation by helping online users distinguish between reliable journalism and promotional content or misinformation.
|
|
National security lawyer Bradley Moss, who routinely represents clients in security clearance disputes, said it's important to distinguish between "access" and "eligibility" to receive classified information.
|
|
I'm old enough to remember a time when Fox News would be incensed if you didn't distinguish between its news operation and its conservative opinion hosts.
|
|
In a 6-3 opinion, the Court said an insanity defense that considers whether a defendant can distinguish between right and wrong is not constitutionally required.
|
|
Yes, we get it, he's a trained chameleon, and how do we — or he — distinguish between his fitting into America and pretending to fit into America.
|
|
Other laws distinguish between those duties Mr. Whitaker may carry out as acting attorney general and those limited to an attorney general confirmed by the Senate.
|
|
I didn't learn to distinguish between what was truly important to me and what I was doing because I thought it was important in others' eyes.
|
|
"I distinguish between those tax increases that were part of Obamacare that increase premiums and the cost of health care versus those that don't," she said.
|
|
" Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh, who was an active questioner, said the two rulings required judges to distinguish between "someone who's merely immature as opposed to incorrigible.
|
|
That means that there can be two accounts on the device, and it can distinguish between to-do lists, music lists, and other types of content.
|
|
The New York State terrorism law is a model in tackling this threat in its refusal to distinguish between foreign and domestic influence for terrorist violence.
|
|
When I listen to tapes of our sessions, I am struck by how difficult it can be to distinguish between a Republican and a Democratic questioner.
|
|
The infection of mistruths that struck in 2016 has gone to bone and brain, rendered so many of us unable to distinguish between lie and truth.
|
|
Adults are also not similar to children: The county could extend the ban to adults, but it was not impermissible to distinguish between adults and children.
|
|
Mr. Hernandez's lawyers have argued that he has limited intelligence and a personality disorder that makes it difficult for him to distinguish between fantasy and reality.
|
|
The system deploys based on the judgement of seven sensors and an algorithm, which must distinguish between run-of-the-mill hurtling and a true crash.
|
|
Perhaps such criticism is why she's sometimes seemed unwilling or unable to distinguish between disingenuous political pile-ons and good-faith calls to respect Jewish sensitivities.
|
|
Here we'll distinguish between empathy in a traditional sense of "feeling their pain" and so-called cognitive empathy, which consists of just understanding the person's perspective.
|
|
It came from the people—often visitors from outside of town—who couldn't or didn't want to distinguish between what's fake Chinese and what's genuinely Chinese.
|
|
Amazon's Alexa, the software that runs on Echo and Dot devices, already supports multiple users, but technology to distinguish between voices is reportedly still in development.
|
|
Others were quick to warn of the linguistic perils of losing the circumflex to distinguish between sûr, or sure, an adjective, and, sur, or on, a preposition.
|
|
The fact that ISIS fighters tend to hide among civilians and use them as human shields makes it harder to distinguish between a fighter and a civilian.
|
|
And they can build "interferometers"—sets of smaller telescopes that work together as one, which help astronomers distinguish between terrestrial and celestial signals—instead of standalone dishes.
|
|
Banks have complained that the rule is too restrictive, arguing that it can be almost impossible to distinguish between prohibited trading from permitted activities like market-making.
|
|
Another drawback of the study is that it didn't distinguish between patients with and without symptoms, said Dr. Hossein Borghaei of Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia.
|
|
By employing these crowdsourced microworkers, Google was able to use them to teach the algorithms it was running how to distinguish between human targets and surrounding objects.
|
|
At a glance, I can tell between three kinds of forget-me-nots (field, broadleaf, and woodland), or distinguish between a common yarrow and a high mallow.
|
|
All the high-profile incidents have involved verified accounts, but a spokeswoman told The Verge that Twitter's content filters do not currently distinguish between types of accounts.
|
|
It's more likely that you're at the behest of the "cross-race effect," — where our brains can find it difficult to distinguish between people of other backgrounds.
|
|
Using the German Receiver for Astronomy at Terahertz Frequencies, known as GREAT, allowed researchers to distinguish between oxygen from our atmosphere and that of the Martian atmosphere.
|
|
These algorithms need to distinguish between real attacks and false positives, such as when a vehicle owner has modified the software for speed or other safety precautions.
|
|
Each part of specimen was shrunk the same amount, so the body stayed relatively in proportion, allowing researchers to still distinguish between a functional or nonfunctional organ.
|
|
For example, the Joy-Con can distinguish between a hand throwing rock-paper-scissors motions, as well as determine how far away it is from the controller.
|
|
How can a creature be smart enough to open doors and undergo toilet training, but lack the discernment to distinguish between a mouse and a laser pointer?
|
|
Each face is annotated with these characteristics, making it easier for programmers to hone their systems to better distinguish between, say, a goatee and a soul patch.
|
|
From the few pictures that we've seen of Rumi and Sir Carter, it is pretty hard to distinguish between the two newest members of the Carter household.
|
|
"They might know a few of our players but it is very difficult for Westerners to distinguish between Asians and that's why we did that," Shin said.
|
|
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights blamed the strikes on the Syrian regime and Russia, but it is generally difficult to distinguish between Syrian and Russian jets.
|
|
In an interview with The Telegraph, Pelliccia claimed his taste buds could distinguish between thousands of different flavors in order to detect any defects with a product.
|
|
Facebook's decision to censor such a photograph, arising from its institutional unwillingness to distinguish between child pornography and images of children maimed by armed conflict, was despicable.
|
|
Harvard's Food Law and Policy Clinic hope that clear and consistent labeling laws that distinguish between quality and safety will go some way to alleviating the problem.
|
|
Many of you are probably wondering how viruses are distinguished from other forms of microbial life, and why there's even a need to distinguish between the two.
|
|
The formula does not distinguish between workers who had low wages and those who worked for part of their careers in jobs not covered by Social Security.
|
|
Not only is some favoritism acceptable in deciding who gets an exclusive interview, but judges would be at a loss to distinguish between permissible and impermissible favoritism.
|
|
Dani's descent into the absurd captures how loss distorts one's ability to perceive reality, making it impossible to distinguish between what is normal and what is unreal.
|
|
The teams wore red (Russia) and green (Saudi Arabia), two of the colours people with a type of colour vision deficiency (CVD) are unable to distinguish between.
|
|
Denial-of-service attacks work by sending floods of phony traffic to a service, making it impossible for administrators to distinguish between bad requests and legitimate users.
|
|
One limitation of the study, however, is that the accelerometers couldn't distinguish between sedentary time from sitting versus inactive periods when people were standing, the authors note.
|
|
Facebook could not distinguish between an iconic war photo and nudity A subsequent post about the removal from Egeland's employer, Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten, also contained the image.
|
|
That in particular includes lidar and high-definition digital maps that will help automated cars distinguish between overhead signs and an obstacle such as a tractor-trailer.
|
|
To make sure the cars are only honking when absolutely necessary, Google is teaching the cars' software to distinguish between actual honk-demanding situations and false positives.
|
|
At times, they felt the statements failed to distinguish between the company's ambitions and the reality of what it could produce in the near term, they said.
|
|
The study is also limited by the fact that researchers didn't distinguish between planned and unplanned doctor visits or hospital stays within the first week after discharge.
|
|
Jorge Neto Valente, head of Macau's Lawyers Association, said the government did not distinguish between land idle for speculative intentions or reasons out of the developer's control.
|
|
But you can't really understand the politics behind America's declining economic freedom if you fail to distinguish between the regulatory and fiscal aspects of the economic policy.
|
|
Dwarf Fortress uses color to distinguish between creatures—a goblin and a goose are both the letter "g" but the colors are slightly different variants of white.
|
|
"We will continue to not distinguish between same and opposite sex spouses when it comes to the benefits we offer under our health insurance plan," she said.
|
|
In March of 21968, he discussed his dilemma with his father, who urged him to distinguish between the failings of the Church and the perfection of God.
|
|
"With these observations, we hope to distinguish between the two competing hypotheses of a neutron star either near a black hole or embedded in a powerful nebula."
|
|
Children learn to distinguish between the milky scent of mashed banana and the sour zing of an orange wedge long before they ever engage with a flower.
|
|
Because we naturally distinguish between dictatorships and those who suffer under them, we try to respond to circumstances holistically, going beyond the dichotomy of good and evil.
|
|
The data used in the study does not distinguish between fatal incidents that were later found to be justified uses of force and those that were not.
|
|
"It's important to distinguish between the current strong economic conditions and the key longer-run drivers underpinning interest rates," he said at the Economic Club of Minnesota.
|
|
Those with ambiguous symptoms — cough and fever — are put on the phone with Luton, who can try to distinguish between allergies or flu and something more serious.
|
|
In the short term, Germany must learn to distinguish between the problems that are solvable, those that are unsolvable, and those in between that require pragmatic management.
|
|
To prove this, four trained beagles were tested to see if they could distinguish between a normal blood sample and a blood sample from a cancer patient.
|
|
RE: 70% of people tell us that they can't distinguish between a real story and 'fake news', and they also believe that media is somewhat politicized, elitist.
|
|
"The more self-aware you are, the easier it'll be for you to distinguish between what you like, and what you actually want to acquire," she writes.
|
|
There's no standard format for the letters, and some colleges make it difficult to distinguish between grants, which don't need to be repaid, and loans, which do.
|
|
For such fruitful discussions, the two sides should distinguish between questions that will be resolved in formal talks and questions that can be resolved through informal talks.
|
|
I have learned to distinguish between violent and non-violent solutions, and to never label a whole nation because of the hateful acts of a few individuals.
|
|
For the first three or four years of life, many researchers think, a child doesn't distinguish between his own memories and ones that are recounted to him.
|
|
They worry that authorities are failing to distinguish between nicotine e-cigarettes like Juul and vaping devices containing THC, the ingredient responsible for the high from cannabis.
|
|
She said the amnesty and the level of fee would distinguish between those who had gaps on their books and those who had dealt in illegal activities.
|
|
It's very difficult to distinguish between his impact and that of all sorts of other circumstances, but I think we are better off for having his critiques.
|
|
Real estate brokers often distinguish between "north Ironbound," considered desirable because it's near the long commercial corridor of Ferry Street, and "south Ironbound," which is more industrial.
|
|
What's missing is a sense of context and conversation around this imagery -- a conversation that would help a young person distinguish between real sex and porn sex.
|
|
There's going to be a new orange heart emoji, meaning you can spell out a full rainbow of love for anyone who doesn't distinguish between indigo and violet.
|
|
"I still have faith in our legal system, and I hope moving forward we can distinguish between emotion and facts," the Flipping Out star told PEOPLE on Wednesday.
|
|
As we're getting the results much better, making it so people can't distinguish between the fake and the real one, we're working harder trying to make it detectable.
|
|
And so we knew that in the past, because those small businesses were tied to individual rates, you couldn't distinguish between Michael Jordan and Michael the local plumber.
|
|
I wanted to distinguish between people I can appreciate trying to deal with immediate, real problems in their lives and the ones who characterize themselves as guinea pigs.
|
|
Carter points out, for example, that in order for the algorithm to distinguish between scuba divers and snorkelers, it also associates different types of animals with each category.
|
|
He was also careful (as we should be) to distinguish between the Ottoman atrocities of the 19th century and his admiration for the ethics and discipline of Islam.
|
|
Judges often fail to distinguish between fighters who may have killed, raped, or tortured, and people who continued to do their jobs after ISIS took over their neighborhood.
|
|
Its sensors work 360 degrees, including in the dark and have been programmed to distinguish between tandem bikes, bikes with big wheels, unicycles, and other types of bikes.
|
|
The sūrah [chapter] headings were added much later in red ink in the recognisable space purposely left blank to distinguish between the end and the beginning of chapters.
|
|
Venture capital investors are well accustomed to both types of information, and it is essentially their job to distinguish between the two, taking into account risk and uncertainty.
|
|
It should be noted that 15 people is a small group—there is every chance that it might be much harder to distinguish between 1,000 drivers than 15.
|
|
It's likely that Microsoft wants to distinguish between genuine BSOD issues and problems and crashes that are more likely to occur during the testing of Windows 10 builds.
|
|
The company even boasted that the system was smart enough to distinguish between three Amazon employees who dressed up in Pikachu costumes to try to simulate a robbery.
|
|
The challenge we face as a society is whether we can distinguish between those communities in genuine need of support and encouragement and those spreading hate and misinformation.
|
|
This behavior could be because the less mature bedbug nymphs have not developed the eyesight needed to distinguish between white, black and the rainbow of colors, Pereira said.
|
|
He must possess the knowledge to distinguish between Szechuan, Shanghai, and Hunan cuisine, even as he mocks the inconstancy of those who rush from one to the next.
|
|
Not only could they distinguish between individual atoms, they could even see them when they were about only 0.4 angstroms apart, half the length of a chemical bond.
|
|
But it's important to distinguish between the kinds of Trump offenses that debase Ryan, Republicans, and the American ideal, and those that threaten the underpinnings of American democracy.
|
|
The team built its own voice recognition tech that can distinguish between speakers, making for pretty clean transcripts that aren't always perfect but are still very usable. Otter.
|
|
TSA officials said they purposely did not distinguish between chartered flights and commercial flights in a statement about whether Cuba flights would be equipped with federal air marshals.
|
|
"Walmart must distinguish between a 'Made In USA' product from all others by grouping the American made product separately, and highlighting the Made In USA label," he said.
|
|
The main flaw in his plan to distinguish between abortion and women's health services is that abortion procedures are women's health services — and they are often medically necessary.
|
|
The Kremlin said on Friday that moderate and Islamist extremist rebels were fighting in close proximity on the ground, making it difficult to distinguish between the two groups.
|
|
Security experts say this is necessary to allow counter-terror forces to distinguish between them and the desert-based jihadists who were never invited to the negotiating table.
|
|
Starting today, multiple people can connect accounts to the speaker and Google Assistant, the smart AI helper that powers the device, will be able to distinguish between voices.
|
|
The issue was compounded by companies' inability to distinguish between the various groups affected, said Vinay Kapoor, head of diversity and inclusion for BNP Paribas in the Americas.
|
|
But aside from their policy differences, there is another way to distinguish between Trump and Pence, which is the likely impact of their presidencies on the political landscape.
|
|
The study didn't analyze the information patients received from their doctors before the surgery, so the researchers can't distinguish between what patients were told and what they remembered.
|
|
Late in his career Selye came to distinguish between "eustress", or the good stress caused by positive experiences, such as falling in love, and distress, the bad sort.
|
|
But Domino's app doesn't work well and can't distinguish between a real pizza, a picture of a pizza, or a crudely drawn MS Paint image of a pizza.
|
|
Ms Baker argues that black people know best when they are being racially demeaned in the same way that women can best distinguish between a compliment and harassment.
|
|
In addition to its security features, Australia's new A$5 note will include a tactile element to help vision-impaired people distinguish between the different denominations of banknotes.
|
|
Past studies not involving Hollywood leading men or past leaders of the free world have shown sheep being able to distinguish between photos of other sheep and humans.
|
|
An artificial intelligence program then used the fMRI images to distinguish between when the participants were thinking about the face, and when they were thinking about the name.
|
|
The Facebook spokesperson did not respond to Insider's questions about how or whether the company would distinguish between filters that glamorize cosmetic surgery and those criticizing the process.
|
|
Even if the FBI wanted to monitor this hate speech, they wouldn't have the resources, or any way to distinguish between those who talk and those who act.
|
|
A trove of internal documents reviewed by ProPublica sheds new light on the secret guidelines that Facebook's censors use to distinguish between hate speech and legitimate political expression.
|
|
The law's critics say the language fails to adequately distinguish between criminals and otherwise law-abiding undocumented immigrants or asylum seekers who attempt to enter the United States.
|
|
What Tuesday night in Virginia showed is that most voters outside of the GOP base simply don't distinguish between support for Trump personally and support for Trump's agenda.
|
|
Trump's remarks, however, put his intelligence chiefs in a bind, even though he tends to distinguish between his administration and former President Obama's when disparaging the intelligence community.
|
|
British climate scientists have published a new article in the journal Cryosphere announcing a new method of analyzing satellite imagery to distinguish between snow, rock, shadow, and clouds.
|
|
"It is artificial, a false dichotomy, to distinguish between environment and conflict because increasingly with climate change we will see that being a contributor to conflict," Glasser said.
|
|
There is no way to distinguish between someone who smoked a joint in the morning before work and one who did so three weeks ago on a weekend.
|
|
It is not accurate that those invested in preventing harassment and assault cannot tell the difference between the two, or distinguish between an inappropriate remark and a rape.
|
|
Wall Street regulators just passed new rules that, advocates say, may make it even more difficult to distinguish between which financial pros are acting in your best interest.
|
|
That was largely because the justices have not been able to agree on a legal standard that would let them distinguish between illegally partisan maps and acceptable ones.
|
|
Experts now distinguish between the "new cannabis" — legal, highly potent, available in tabs, edibles and vapes — and the old version, a far milder weed passed around in joints.
|
|
Even if the F.B.I. wanted to monitor this hate speech, they wouldn't have the resources, or any way to distinguish between those who talk and those who act.
|
|
" But, Dr. Clayton, a postdoctoral fellow in nutrition at the University of Colorado, Boulder, said, "It's important to distinguish between hypo-responders and hyper-responders to dietary cholesterol.
|
|
But most can distinguish between children clicking through social media for hours, compared with using school-sanctioned online tools to collaborate with other students on a class project.
|
|
One of the central ideas of the law of war is the principle of distinction: that combatants distinguish between military and civilian targets and only attack the former.
|
|
One that many parents swear by is the SNOO ($971), which comes with innovative features like an app and an algorithm that can distinguish between different baby cries.
|
|
The civilians who stick around are hardly safe; the Syrian government does not distinguish between fighters and those who give them aid, medical care, shelter or news coverage.
|
|
"That's why we want to ensure we avoid enforcing against innocent actors and prioritize helping people distinguish between inauthentic behavior and authentic speech," Gleicher said in a statement.
|
|
"It makes no sense that the law continues to distinguish between abuse and sexual assault," Nuria Gonzalez, a Barcelona-based human rights lawyer, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
|
|
Because scientists can&apost accurately measure those photon pops, they can&apost distinguish between that noise and any gravitational wave signals that fall within the same frequency range.
|
|
However, when digging into the research, it becomes clear that it's important to distinguish between the uptick in infidelity among women as a whole, and women in power.
|
|
Ritwik reads us the graffiti and tells us how to distinguish between the men who have come just to relieve themselves and those who are looking for more.
|
|
China's implementing regulations continue to distinguish between foreign and domestic companies, which "enables the establishment of de facto requirements and limitations for foreign investors," the business groups note.
|
|
He also failed to distinguish between refusing to decorate a cake with derogatory language and refusing to provide a wedding cake to a same-sex couple (Masterpiece Cakeshop).
|
|
The trouble with Obama's tax policy (which Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders mimicked in the 2016 campaign) was that it didn't distinguish between the second and third groups.
|
|
We walk in circles, so limited by our own anxieties that we can no longer distinguish between true and false, between the gangster's whim and the purest ideal.
|
|
The bot can distinguish between a baby weed and a baby crop, and can annihilate that weed with incredible precision, radically reducing the use of herbicides on fields.
|
|