• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
AI mirrors’ are changing the way blind people see themselves

AI mirrors’ are changing the way blind people see themselves

January 27, 2026
True Stories of People Who Risked Everything for Books

True Stories of People Who Risked Everything for Books

February 28, 2026
Tinubu reappoints Audi as NSCDC CG

Tinubu reappoints Audi as NSCDC CG

February 28, 2026
AREWA: Where Is Our Northern Pride?

AREWA: Where Is Our Northern Pride?

February 28, 2026
Tajudeen Abbas: Legislative Stability and Grassroots Impact

Tajudeen Abbas: Legislative Stability and Grassroots Impact

February 27, 2026
Dangote Cement, Sinoma Sign $1bn Strategic Agreements for cement Projects Across Africa

Dangote Cement, Sinoma Sign $1bn Strategic Agreements for cement Projects Across Africa

February 27, 2026
Netflix drops bid for Warner Bros, clearing way for Paramount takeover

Netflix drops bid for Warner Bros, clearing way for Paramount takeover

February 27, 2026
INEC shifts 2027 general elections

INEC shifts 2027 general elections

February 26, 2026
Tunji Disu takes over as  Inspector-General of Police

Tunji Disu takes over as Inspector-General of Police

February 25, 2026
Reps Committee Endorses NAHCON’s ₦6.6 Billion Hajj Budget for Review

Reps Committee Endorses NAHCON’s ₦6.6 Billion Hajj Budget for Review

February 25, 2026
“As Director General of NAPTIP, I reaffirm that survivors are not criminals”-Binta Adamu Bello

“As Director General of NAPTIP, I reaffirm that survivors are not criminals”-Binta Adamu Bello

February 23, 2026
Federal Mortgage Bank records N152.4 billion NHF collection

Federal Mortgage Bank records N152.4 billion NHF collection

February 23, 2026
DHQ Rallies West African Forces on Combat Strategies against Terrorism

DHQ Rallies West African Forces on Combat Strategies against Terrorism

February 22, 2026
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Photo Splash
    • Contact Us
  • News
Sunday, March 1, 2026
  • Login
Enterprise News Global
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
    Tinubu reappoints Audi as NSCDC CG

    Tinubu reappoints Audi as NSCDC CG

    INEC shifts 2027 general elections

    INEC shifts 2027 general elections

    Tunji Disu takes over as  Inspector-General of Police

    Tunji Disu takes over as Inspector-General of Police

    Reps Committee Endorses NAHCON’s ₦6.6 Billion Hajj Budget for Review

    Reps Committee Endorses NAHCON’s ₦6.6 Billion Hajj Budget for Review

    NNPC, Dangote Deepen Strategic Partnership to Boost Energy Security

    NNPC, Dangote Deepen Strategic Partnership to Boost Energy Security

    House Committee Orders New NAHCON Boss to Appear Before Lawmakers or Face Sanction

    House Committee Orders New NAHCON Boss to Appear Before Lawmakers or Face Sanction

    Trending Tags

  • Analysis
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Agriculture
    • Innovation
    • Oil & Gas
  • Art & Culture
    • Lifestyle
      Top 10 Richest Fashion Designers in Nigeria 2025 and Net Worth

      Top 10 Richest Fashion Designers in Nigeria 2025 and Net Worth

      THE ROOT CAUSE OF DISEASE IN HUMAN

      THE ROOT CAUSE OF DISEASE IN HUMAN

      “CIS Aisha Shehu Nda has shown us what it means to serve with heart and purpose,” Ambassador Malami

      “CIS Aisha Shehu Nda has shown us what it means to serve with heart and purpose,” Ambassador Malami

      Hope in Pink: Maraban Jos Women Empowered in Breast and Cervical Cancer Awareness Drive

      Hope in Pink: Maraban Jos Women Empowered in Breast and Cervical Cancer Awareness Drive

      Trending Tags

    • Travel
  • International
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Photo Splash
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    Tinubu reappoints Audi as NSCDC CG

    Tinubu reappoints Audi as NSCDC CG

    INEC shifts 2027 general elections

    INEC shifts 2027 general elections

    Tunji Disu takes over as  Inspector-General of Police

    Tunji Disu takes over as Inspector-General of Police

    Reps Committee Endorses NAHCON’s ₦6.6 Billion Hajj Budget for Review

    Reps Committee Endorses NAHCON’s ₦6.6 Billion Hajj Budget for Review

    NNPC, Dangote Deepen Strategic Partnership to Boost Energy Security

    NNPC, Dangote Deepen Strategic Partnership to Boost Energy Security

    House Committee Orders New NAHCON Boss to Appear Before Lawmakers or Face Sanction

    House Committee Orders New NAHCON Boss to Appear Before Lawmakers or Face Sanction

    Trending Tags

  • Analysis
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Agriculture
    • Innovation
    • Oil & Gas
  • Art & Culture
    • Lifestyle
      Top 10 Richest Fashion Designers in Nigeria 2025 and Net Worth

      Top 10 Richest Fashion Designers in Nigeria 2025 and Net Worth

      THE ROOT CAUSE OF DISEASE IN HUMAN

      THE ROOT CAUSE OF DISEASE IN HUMAN

      “CIS Aisha Shehu Nda has shown us what it means to serve with heart and purpose,” Ambassador Malami

      “CIS Aisha Shehu Nda has shown us what it means to serve with heart and purpose,” Ambassador Malami

      Hope in Pink: Maraban Jos Women Empowered in Breast and Cervical Cancer Awareness Drive

      Hope in Pink: Maraban Jos Women Empowered in Breast and Cervical Cancer Awareness Drive

      Trending Tags

    • Travel
  • International
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Photo Splash
No Result
View All Result
Enterprise News Global
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Analysis
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Art & Culture
  • International
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Photo Splash
Home Innovation

AI mirrors’ are changing the way blind people see themselves

By Milagros Costabel

January 27, 2026
in Innovation
Reading Time: 11 mins read
0
AI mirrors’ are changing the way blind people see themselves
0
SHARES
6
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Artificial intelligence is helping blind people access visual feedback about their bodies, sometimes for the first time – but the emotional and psychological consequences are only just starting to emerge.

I am completely blind and always have been.

For the past year, my mornings begin with a skincare ritual that takes 20 minutes to apply five different products. I follow it with a photo session that I share with artificial intelligence within an app called Be My Eyes, as if it were a mirror.

Read Also

NYA Hosts Arewa Tiktokers, Emphasizes Opportunities In Digital Skills

NYA Hosts Arewa Tiktokers, Emphasizes Opportunities In Digital Skills

February 12, 2026

Dangote Cement Unveils Multi-Million-Naira Social Interventions in Gboko Communities

December 22, 2025

The two teenagers from rural Ireland who suprised every bank on Earth

December 8, 2025

The app – with its virtual eyes – helps tell me if my skin is looking the way I want it to, or if there is anything about my appearance that I should change.

“All our lives, blind people have had to grapple with the idea that seeing ourselves is impossible, that we are beautiful on the inside, and the first thing we judge about a person is their voice, but we know we’ll never be able to see them,” says Lucy Edwards, a blind content creator who rose to fame, in part, by showing her passion for beauty and styling and teaching blind people how to do their makeup. “Suddenly we have access to all this information about ourselves, about the world, it changes our lives.” Artificial intelligence is allowing blind people to access a world of information that was previously denied to us. Through image recognition and intelligent processing, apps like the one I use provide detailed information not only about the world we inhabit, but also about ourselves and our place in it. The technology does more than simply describe the scene in an image – they offer critical feedback, comparisons and even advice. And it is changing how the blind people who use these apps see themselves.

A new kind of mirror
“Your skin is hydrated, but it definitely doesn’t look like the almost perfect example of reflective skin, with non-existent pores as if it were glass, in beauty ads,” the AI told me this morning after I shared a photo I thought would show beautiful skin. For the first time in a long time, my dissatisfaction with how I look felt crushingly real.

“We have seen that people who seek more feedback about their bodies, in all areas, have lower body image satisfaction,” says Helena Lewis-Smith, an applied health psychology researcher focused on body image at the University of Bristol. “AI is opening up this possibility for blind people.”

This change is recent – less than two years ago, the idea of an AI offering live, critical feedback seemed like science fiction. When we started in 2017, we were able to offer basic descriptions, just a short sentence of two or three words,” says Karthik Mahadevan, the chief executive of Envision, one of the first companies to use artificial intelligence for blind people in this way. Envision started out as a mobile app that allowed blind people to access information in printed text through character recognition. In recent years, it has introduced advanced artificial intelligence models into smart glasses and created an assistant – available on the web, mobile phones and the glasses themselves – that help blind people interact with the visual world around them.

“Some use it for obvious things, like reading letters or shopping, but we were surprised by the number of customers who use it to do their makeup or coordinate their outfits,” Mahadevan adds. “Often the first question they ask is how they look.”

These apps, of which there are now at least four specialising in this area, can, at the user’s request, rate a person based on what artificial intelligence considers to be traditional beauty standards. They compare them to other people and tell them exactly what they would do well to change about their bodies.

The truth is that I haven’t had an opinion about my face for 12 years. Suddenly I’m taking a photo and I can ask AI – Lucy Edwards
For many, this possibility is empowering: “It feels like AI is pretending to be my mirror,” 30-year-old Edwards tells the BBC. “I had sight for 17 years of my life, and while I could always ask people to describe things to me, the truth is that I haven’t had an opinion about my face for 12 years. Suddenly I’m taking a photo and I can ask AI to give me all the details, to give me a score out of 10, and although it’s not the same as seeing, it’s the closest I’m going to get for now.”

There is not yet enough research on the effect that using such AI tools might have on the blind people who turn to them. But experts in body image psychology warn that the results AI tools can come up with may not always be positive. AI image generators, for example, have been found to perpetuate idealised Western body shape standards – largely because of the data they are trained on.

“We know that today a young person can upload a photo to AI that they think looks great and ask it to change one small thing,” says Lewis-Smith. “The AI’s processing can return a photo with a lot of changes that make the person look totally different, implying that all of this is what they should change, and therefore that the way they look now is not good enough.”

For blind people, this situation is reflected in the descriptions they receive. Such a discrepancy can be unsettling enough for a sighted person. But it could be even more dangerous to a blind person. Those I interviewed for this piece agreed.

This is because it’s harder for blind people to see the textual results with an objective view of reality. The user would also have to balance their own image of their body with beauty standards set by an algorithm that does not take into account the importance of subjectivity and individuality.

“One of the main reasons for the pressure people feel about their own bodies is constant comparison with other people,” says Lewis-Smith. “What is scary now is that AI not only allows blind people to do this by comparing themselves to descriptions of photos of other human beings, but also to what AI might consider the perfect version of them.

‘AI mirrors’ are changing the way blind people see themselves
11 hours ago
Milagros Costabel

Share

Save
Serenity Strull/ BBC Illustration of Milagros Costabel’s face framed in a circle with dots indicating image recognition (Credit: Serenity Strull/ BBC)Serenity Strull/ BBC
(Credit: Serenity Strull/ BBC)
Artificial intelligence is helping blind people access visual feedback about their bodies, sometimes for the first time – but the emotional and psychological consequences are only just starting to emerge.

I am completely blind and always have been.

For the past year, my mornings begin with a skincare ritual that takes 20 minutes to apply five different products. I follow it with a photo session that I share with artificial intelligence within an app called Be My Eyes, as if it were a mirror.

The app – with its virtual eyes – helps tell me if my skin is looking the way I want it to, or if there is anything about my appearance that I should change.

“All our lives, blind people have had to grapple with the idea that seeing ourselves is impossible, that we are beautiful on the inside, and the first thing we judge about a person is their voice, but we know we’ll never be able to see them,” says Lucy Edwards, a blind content creator who rose to fame, in part, by showing her passion for beauty and styling and teaching blind people how to do their makeup. “Suddenly we have access to all this information about ourselves, about the world, it changes our lives.”

Artificial intelligence is allowing blind people to access a world of information that was previously denied to us. Through image recognition and intelligent processing, apps like the one I use provide detailed information not only about the world we inhabit, but also about ourselves and our place in it. The technology does more than simply describe the scene in an image – they offer critical feedback, comparisons and even advice. And it is changing how the blind people who use these apps see themselves.

A new kind of mirror
“Your skin is hydrated, but it definitely doesn’t look like the almost perfect example of reflective skin, with non-existent pores as if it were glass, in beauty ads,” the AI told me this morning after I shared a photo I thought would show beautiful skin. For the first time in a long time, my dissatisfaction with how I look felt crushingly real.

“We have seen that people who seek more feedback about their bodies, in all areas, have lower body image satisfaction,” says Helena Lewis-Smith, an applied health psychology researcher focused on body image at the University of Bristol. “AI is opening up this possibility for blind people.”

This change is recent – less than two years ago, the idea of an AI offering live, critical feedback seemed like science fiction.

Milagros Costabel Milagros Costabel uses an AI-powered app each morning as a kind of audible mirror (Credit: Milagros Costabel)Milagros Costabel
Milagros Costabel uses an AI-powered app each morning as a kind of audible mirror (Credit: Milagros Costabel)

“When we started in 2017, we were able to offer basic descriptions, just a short sentence of two or three words,” says Karthik Mahadevan, the chief executive of Envision, one of the first companies to use artificial intelligence for blind people in this way. Envision started out as a mobile app that allowed blind people to access information in printed text through character recognition. In recent years, it has introduced advanced artificial intelligence models into smart glasses and created an assistant – available on the web, mobile phones and the glasses themselves – that help blind people interact with the visual world around them.

“Some use it for obvious things, like reading letters or shopping, but we were surprised by the number of customers who use it to do their makeup or coordinate their outfits,” Mahadevan adds. “Often the first question they ask is how they look.”

These apps, of which there are now at least four specialising in this area, can, at the user’s request, rate a person based on what artificial intelligence considers to be traditional beauty standards. They compare them to other people and tell them exactly what they would do well to change about their bodies.

The truth is that I haven’t had an opinion about my face for 12 years. Suddenly I’m taking a photo and I can ask AI – Lucy Edwards
For many, this possibility is empowering: “It feels like AI is pretending to be my mirror,” 30-year-old Edwards tells the BBC. “I had sight for 17 years of my life, and while I could always ask people to describe things to me, the truth is that I haven’t had an opinion about my face for 12 years. Suddenly I’m taking a photo and I can ask AI to give me all the details, to give me a score out of 10, and although it’s not the same as seeing, it’s the closest I’m going to get for now.”

There is not yet enough research on the effect that using such AI tools might have on the blind people who turn to them. But experts in body image psychology warn that the results AI tools can come up with may not always be positive. AI image generators, for example, have been found to perpetuate idealised Western body shape standards – largely because of the data they are trained on.

“We know that today a young person can upload a photo to AI that they think looks great and ask it to change one small thing,” says Lewis-Smith. “The AI’s processing can return a photo with a lot of changes that make the person look totally different, implying that all of this is what they should change, and therefore that the way they look now is not good enough.”

For blind people, this situation is reflected in the descriptions they receive. Such a discrepancy can be unsettling enough for a sighted person. But it could be even more dangerous to a blind person. Those I interviewed for this piece agreed.

This is because it’s harder for blind people to see the textual results with an objective view of reality. The user would also have to balance their own image of their body with beauty standards set by an algorithm that does not take into account the importance of subjectivity and individuality.

“One of the main reasons for the pressure people feel about their own bodies is constant comparison with other people,” says Lewis-Smith. “What is scary now is that AI not only allows blind people to do this by comparing themselves to descriptions of photos of other human beings, but also to what AI might consider the perfect version of them.

Milagros Costabel The AI apps use machine vision to analyse a photograph of a person’s face before responding to questions for feedback (Credit: Milagros Costabel)Milagros Costabel
The AI apps use machine vision to analyse a photograph of a person’s face before responding to questions for feedback (Credit: Milagros Costabel)
“We have seen that the more pressure people have about their bodies, the more cases of mental health conditions such as depression and anxiety increase, and the more likely people are to consider things like cosmetic adjustments to conform to these unrealistic ideas,” Lewis-Smith adds.

For many blind people like me, this is something very new.

“Maybe if your jaw was less elongated (…) your face would look a little more like what is objectively considered beautiful in your culture.” It’s 03:00, and I find myself talking to a machine – after uploading more than five different photos of my body to the latest version of Open AI’s ChatGPT. I am trying to understand where I stand in terms of beauty standards.

My questions to the AI – such as, “Do you think there is a traditionally beautiful person who looks like me?” or “Do you think my face is jarring if you saw it for the first time?” – are rooted in my insecurities and the information I would like to obtain.But they are also an attempt to make sense of a visual idea of a body that had been denied to me until now.

AI was at a loss when it came to helping me define what could be considered beautiful by a large number of people, or when I asked it to explain exactly why my jaw was long – a concept that was difficult for me to grasp as well.

Suddenly, even without much context, I was receiving messages about beauty reflected by the media and the internet. In the past, blind people were not so exposed to these, but AI now offers them detail-rich descriptions.

“We could see AI as a textual mirror, in this case, but in psychological literature, rather than how a person looks, we understand that body image is not one-dimensional and is made up of several factors, such as context, the type of people we want to compare ourselves to, and the things we are capable of doing with our bodies,” says Meryl Alper, a researcher on media, body image, and people with disabilities at Northeastern University in Boston in the US. “All of this is something that AI does not understand and will not take into account when making its descriptions.”

AI models have historically been trained to favour thin, overly sexualised bodies with Eurocentric features. When it comes to defining beauty, they have failed to consider people from diverse backgrounds when it comes to generating images.

Due to the very way it processes information, AI tends to describe everything in strictly visual terms, which could lead to dissatisfaction if the description lacks a logical context. Control and contextualisation, says Street, could be a way to address this problem. “AI today can tell you that you have a sideways smile,” Street says. “But for now it can’t analyse all your photos and tell you that, for example, you have the same expression as when you were enjoying the Sun on the beach, and this kind of thing could be useful for a blind person to understand and contextualise themselves better.”

Power and trust
This type of control, although not in such an advanced form, already exists. As with artificial intelligence in all its forms, the prompt that we give – the written or spoken instruction – has the ability to completely change the information a blind person gets when posting a picture of themselves.

“People being able to control the information they receive is one of the main features of our products, because AI can learn their preferences and desires and give people the information they need to hear,” says Mahadevan.

That idea of control could turn out to be a double-edged sword, however. “I can ask the app to describe me in two sentences, or in a romantic way, or even in a poem,” says Edwards. “These descriptions have the potential to change the way we feel about ourselves.But this can also be used in a negative way, because maybe you don’t like something about yourself, and you tell the AI that you’re not sure about a feature of your body. Maybe your hair is a little messy and you mention it in your request. While it may tell you, ‘Oh, it’s beautiful,’ it may also tell you, ‘You’re right, here’s how you can change it,'” Edwards adds.

But when technology acts as our eyes, there is a risk of it describing something that doesn’t exist at all. Hallucinations – where AI models pass off inaccurate or false information as true – are one of the biggest problems with the technology. “At first, the descriptions were very good, but we noticed that many of them were inaccurate and changed important details, or invented information when what was in the image didn’t seem to be enough,” explains Mahadevan. “But the technology is improving by leaps and bounds, and these errors are becoming less and less common.”

But it is important to note that AI isn’t right all the time, despite Envision’s optimism. When Joaquín Valentinuzzi, a 20-year-old blind man, decided to use artificial intelligence to evaluate himself by choosing the perfect photos for a dating app profile, he found that the information returned by the AI sometimes bore little resemblance to reality. “Sometimes it changed my hair colour or described my expressions incorrectly, telling me I had a neutral expression when I was actually smiling,” he says. “This kind of thing can make you feel insecure, especially if, as we are encouraged to do, we trust these tools and use them as a way to gain self-knowledge and try and keep up with the way our bodies look.” Credit: BBC

ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

Former-Nigeria oil minister stands trial in UK on bribery charges

Next Post

An Open Letter to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu: A Nation in Distress, a Mandate at Risk

Related Posts

NYA Hosts Arewa Tiktokers, Emphasizes Opportunities In Digital Skills
Innovation

NYA Hosts Arewa Tiktokers, Emphasizes Opportunities In Digital Skills

February 12, 2026
Dangote Cement Unveils Multi-Million-Naira Social Interventions in Gboko Communities
Innovation

Dangote Cement Unveils Multi-Million-Naira Social Interventions in Gboko Communities

December 22, 2025
The two teenagers from rural Ireland who suprised  every bank on Earth
Innovation

The two teenagers from rural Ireland who suprised every bank on Earth

December 8, 2025
AI and the Future of Fashion
Innovation

AI and the Future of Fashion

December 2, 2025
SMEDAN  2025 National MSME GROW  Conference will drive innovation in the sector- DG
Innovation

SMEDAN 2025 National MSME GROW Conference will drive innovation in the sector- DG

November 23, 2025
Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs unveils digital platform to achieve paperless civil service
Innovation

Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs unveils digital platform to achieve paperless civil service

November 23, 2025
Next Post
An Open Letter to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu: A Nation in Distress, a Mandate at Risk

An Open Letter to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu: A Nation in Distress, a Mandate at Risk

U.S. Military Strikes in Nigeria Breach Sovereignty. Senator Ningi Raises Alarm

U.S. Military Strikes in Nigeria Breach Sovereignty. Senator Ningi Raises Alarm

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected test

  • 23.9k Followers
  • 99 Subscribers
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
First National Meeting of the  Nigerian Forest Security Service in 2026

First National Meeting of the Nigerian Forest Security Service in 2026

January 22, 2026
14 officers of the Nigerian Forest Security Service decorated

14 officers of the Nigerian Forest Security Service decorated

January 28, 2026
NESO Seeks Stronger Partnership With Defence Ministry, Commends Tinubu, Musa on Security Vision

NESO Seeks Stronger Partnership With Defence Ministry, Commends Tinubu, Musa on Security Vision

December 26, 2025
Photo of the week

Photo of the week

December 30, 2025
PMI endorses Dangote Refinery as a Global Benchmark for Project Excellence

PMI endorses Dangote Refinery as a Global Benchmark for Project Excellence

0
Port Harcourt Poetry Festival Returns for Third Edition

Port Harcourt Poetry Festival Returns for Third Edition

0
Hope in Pink: Maraban Jos Women Empowered in Breast and Cervical Cancer Awareness Drive

Hope in Pink: Maraban Jos Women Empowered in Breast and Cervical Cancer Awareness Drive

0
NNPC Ltd Unveils Health Insurance Scheme for 7,000 Retail Attendants

NNPC Ltd Unveils Health Insurance Scheme for 7,000 Retail Attendants

0
True Stories of People Who Risked Everything for Books

True Stories of People Who Risked Everything for Books

February 28, 2026
Tinubu reappoints Audi as NSCDC CG

Tinubu reappoints Audi as NSCDC CG

February 28, 2026
AREWA: Where Is Our Northern Pride?

AREWA: Where Is Our Northern Pride?

February 28, 2026
Tajudeen Abbas: Legislative Stability and Grassroots Impact

Tajudeen Abbas: Legislative Stability and Grassroots Impact

February 27, 2026

Recent News

True Stories of People Who Risked Everything for Books

True Stories of People Who Risked Everything for Books

February 28, 2026
Tinubu reappoints Audi as NSCDC CG

Tinubu reappoints Audi as NSCDC CG

February 28, 2026
AREWA: Where Is Our Northern Pride?

AREWA: Where Is Our Northern Pride?

February 28, 2026
Tajudeen Abbas: Legislative Stability and Grassroots Impact

Tajudeen Abbas: Legislative Stability and Grassroots Impact

February 27, 2026
Enterprise News Global

Copyright © 2025 ENGC | Designed by AuspiceWeb

Navigate Site

  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Photo Splash
  • News

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Analysis
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Agriculture
    • Innovation
    • Oil & Gas
  • Art & Culture
    • Lifestyle
    • Travel
  • International
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Photo Splash

Copyright © 2025 ENGC | Designed by AuspiceWeb

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Powered by
►
Necessary cookies enable essential site features like secure log-ins and consent preference adjustments. They do not store personal data.
None
►
Functional cookies support features like content sharing on social media, collecting feedback, and enabling third-party tools.
None
►
Analytical cookies track visitor interactions, providing insights on metrics like visitor count, bounce rate, and traffic sources.
None
►
Advertisement cookies deliver personalized ads based on your previous visits and analyze the effectiveness of ad campaigns.
None
►
Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
None
Powered by