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  2. Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conference_on_Computer...

    The conference generally has less than 30% acceptance rates for all papers and less than 5% for oral presentations. [3] [4] [5] It is managed by a rotating group of volunteers who are chosen in a public election at the Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence-Technical Community (PAMI-TC) meeting four years before the meeting. [6]

  3. International Conference on Computer Vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Conference...

    It is considered to be one of the top conferences in computer vision, alongside CVPR and ECCV, [1] [2] [3] and it is held on years in which ECCV is not. The conference is usually spread over four to five days. Typically, experts in the focus areas give tutorial talks on the first day, then the technical sessions (and poster sessions in parallel ...

  4. Right to Information Act, 2005 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_to_Information_Act,_2005

    The Right to Information (Amendment) Bill, 2019, seeks to amend Sections 13, 16, and 27 of the RTI Act. Section 13 of the original Act: It sets the term of the central Chief Information Commissioner and Information Commissioners at five years (or until the age of 65, whichever is earlier). [5]

  5. List of ethics journals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ethics_journals

    This is a list of peer-reviewed, academic journals in the field of ethics. Note : there are many important academic magazines that are not true peer-reviewed journals. They are not listed here.

  6. Code of Conduct for Justices of the Supreme Court of the ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_of_Conduct_for...

    The code was issued during a time when the court faced great criticism, especially around the conduct of justice Clarence Thomas.It was shown that he received undisclosed gifts of luxury travel [2] and that he was involved with cases that were related to the political activities of his wife, Ginni Thomas, who worked to overturn the 2020 election results in the weeks leading up to the January 6 ...

  7. Freedom of information laws by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_information...

    The Right to Information Act (RTI Act) was passed by Parliament on 11 May 2005 and was published in the gazette of India on 15 June 2005. It came into effect on 12 October 2005 [77] [78] replacing the erstwhile Freedom of information Act, 2002. The Supreme Court of India had, in several Judgments prior to enactment of both Acts, interpreted ...

  8. Conflicts of interest in academic publishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conflicts_of_interest_in...

    As of 2010, industry-funded papers generally get cited more than others; this is probably due in part to industry-paid publicity. [15] [18] Some journals engage in coercive citation, in which an editor forces an author to add extraneous citations to an article to inflate the impact factor of the journal in which the extraneous papers were ...

  9. Cyberethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyberethics

    Hands are shown typing on a backlit keyboard to communicate with a computer. Cyberethics is "a branch of ethics concerned with behavior in an online environment". [1] In another definition, it is the "exploration of the entire range of ethical and moral issues that arise in cyberspace" while cyberspace is understood to be "the electronic worlds made visible by the Internet."