From Numbers to Names (N2N) You can scan prewar European and Holocaust photos and connect with people alive today (Photo: EPA).

Google engineers have used AI to create software that allows descendants of the Holocaust to identify images of their loved ones.

A platform called Numbers to Names (N2N) provides a new way to explore Holocaust photo and video archives using artificial intelligence.

According to The Times of Israel, the tool scans hundreds of thousands of photos available at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM), as well as photos of individual survivors and their descendants.

Daniel Petty, a 40-year-old software engineer at Google, the project’s creator, is reportedly using his resources in his spare time to work on the project, but a growing team of engineers, researchers, and data scientists. been added

From numbers to names (N2N), you can scan pre-war European and Holocaust photos and connect with people alive today.

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This software still needs some work as it returns 10 matches that can be found in the available databases (Image: WendyL-USER).

“Since the last survivor is passing away, this effort is urgent and there are still many possible connections. N2N makes these connections while the survivors are still with us. I hope it helps,” Pete told The Times of Israel.

The majority of the US Holocaust Memorial Museum’s photography collection, which contains more than 34,000 photographs, is currently being searched by discovery tools.

Currently, there is no unified list of victims and survivors of the Holocaust.

Researching a person’s history is a long and minimally informed process. However, the museum offers a variety of ways for families of survivors and victims on the ground to find information and documents.

Pete was prompted to create artificial intelligence in 2016 while visiting the POLIN Museum of Polish Jewish Jewish History in Warsaw. He reportedly created N2N to help family and others find photos of his loved ones.

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Currently, there is no single list of Holocaust victims and survivors (Image: EPA / www.auschwitz.org).

If you want to use this site, just upload photos almost at the same time.

This software only returns 10 matches that can be found in the available databases, so it still needs some work.

“In the future, we hope that N2N will become an educational tool about the Holocaust and allow students to contribute directly to historical records,” said Pete.

Nonprofits want to work with museums, schools, research institutes, and other organizations that share the common goals of future Holocaust education.