Uploaded on Apr 10, 2022
AI crime prediction software would be great. Except that law enforcement hasn't figured out how to deal with the threat of AI crime prediction software yet, and even if it did they still wouldn't want it.
AI crime prediction software
AI crime Prediction Software
I recently spent a week at the International
Computer Science Institute (ICSI) in
Berkeley, one of the world's leading
research labs in artificial intelligence,
machine learning, and natural language
processing.
The ICSI is a non-profit that receives
funding from the National Science
Foundation, DARPA, and other federal
agencies.
For More Info-AI crime Prediction Software
While there I had a conversation with Dan
Roth and Vamshi Ambati about AI crime
prediction software.
Roth and Ambati are machine learning
experts who have developed software for
predicting crime. In particular, they've
developed models for predicting whether a
juvenile will commit another crime within
the next two years.
Their work has been recognized by the
White House Office of Science and
Technology Policy as a "promising"
technology for reducing recidivism among
juveniles.
In an effort to reduce human bias and
increase accuracy, judges are increasingly
turning to machine learning algorithms
when deciding whether to detain or release
defendants awaiting trial.
Unlike most bail hearings in which a judge
only hears from a prosecutor, defendants
using AI-powered risk assessment tools
have their fate decided by algorithms that
analyze their past behavior (and the
behavior of others who look like them) to
predict future behavior.
Currently, being a criminal seems to be
more of a lifestyle choice than anything
else. What other job offers you the
opportunity to work outdoors, meet new
people and shoot them, and get paid in
cold hard cash?
What if I told you that it might soon
become a lot harder to make a living as a
criminal? You might think that sounds
awesome, but for many people it could be
pretty scary.
Comments