From there you can identify whether the photo overall is publishable, and if not, what students aren't. You can then crop/edit the photo to remove students from then on.
All of this happens in an on-premise VM, rather than calling out to a cloud service. Obviously you can run up an instance in AWS, etc.. if you want to cloud host, but that is the school's volition.
> From there you can identify whether the photo overall is publishable, and if not, what students aren't. You can then crop/edit the photo to remove students from then on.
> All of this happens in an on-premise VM, rather than calling out to a cloud service. Obviously you can run up an instance in AWS, etc.. if you want to cloud host, but that is the school's volition.
But if the parents don't sign the waiver allowing their kids photo to be used, how do you process the photo to determine if any kid in it has not had the waiver signed? Isn't the act of processing the image a violation of the agreement (which is effective since the waiver was not signed)?