John Anderton was Chief of Precrime in the 2002 technoir Spielberg film Minority Report set in the year 2054. Crimes were detected before they occurred by three precognitive humans lying in a vat. Contemporary researchers and police believe that they can begin to pull off that trick - predict a crime before it happens - using computer algorithms. For example, the police in Fresno, California's Real Time Crime Center are testing the Beware crime alert tool developed by the security systems company Intrado. The company claims:
Accessed through any browser (fixed or mobile) on any Internet-enabled device including tablets, smartphones, laptop and desktop computers, Beware® from Intrado searches, sorts and scores billions of publically-available commercial records in a matter of seconds - alerting responders to potentially dangerous situations while en route to, or at the location of, a 9-1-1 request for assistance.
In addition, Beware can calculate a criminal risk score for any residents of Fresno. For example, the Washington Postreported:
While officers raced to a recent 911 call about a man threatening his ex-girlfriend, a police operator in headquarters consulted software that scored the suspect's potential for violence the way a bank might run a credit report.
The program scoured billions of data points, including arrest reports, property records, commercial databases, deep Web searches and the man's social- media postings. It calculated his threat level as the highest of three color-coded scores: a bright red warning.
The man had a firearm conviction and gang associations, so out of caution police called a negotiator. The suspect surrendered, and police said the intelligence helped them make the right call — it turned out he had a gun.
But how results from Beware could mislead police was highlighted at Fresno City Council meeting:
Minority Report
Councilman Clinton J. Olivier, a libertarian-leaning Republican, said Beware was like something out of a dystopian science fiction novel and asked [Police Chief Jerry] Dyer a simple question: "Could you run my threat level now?"
Dyer agreed. The scan returned Olivier as a green, but his home came back as a yellow, possibly because of someone who previously lived at his address, a police official said.
"Even though it's not me that's the yellow guy, your officers are going to treat whoever comes out of that house in his boxer shorts as the yellow guy," Olivier said. "That may not be fair to me."
He added later: "[Beware] has failed right here with a council member as the example."
Researchers are also working on computer systems that can predict the probability that a parolee will re-offend. Bloomberg View reports on the crime forecasting research of University of Pennsylvania statistician Richard Berk. Basically, Berk trained a machine using data on 100,000 cases noting the offenders' age, sex, zip code, age at first arrest, and a long list of possible previous charges for such things as drunk driving, animal mistreatment, and firearms crimes. The machine was then asked to predict which offenders were likely to engage in domestic abuse again. As Bloomberg View reported:
Currently, about half of those arrested for domestic violence are released … The challenge [Berk] and [Penn psychologist Susan] Sorenson faced was to continue to release half but pick a less dangerous half. The result: About 20 percent of those released by judges were later arrested for the same crime. Of the computer's choices, it was only 10 percent.
That's a pretty good result. However, some worry that judges and other members of law enforcement might begin to "trust the software" more than their own knowledge and experience.
No doubt such crime prediction software will be increasingly refined. Its outputs can be used chiefly to cast police suspicion upon citizens or they can be used to intervene in ways that help the people it identifies as being at-risk to avoid becoming criminals.
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Dyer agreed. The scan returned Olivier as a green, but his home came back as a yellow, possibly because of someone who previously lived at his address, a police official said.
Out of an abundance of caution, the council meeting was put on lockdown and Olivier's assets were seized.
Multivac, Othman realizes, is tired; for years it has had all the troubles of the world upon its shoulders, analyzing and predicting war, famine, crime, and now the government is planning to foist the responsibility for preventing disease upon its already stressed mind. Multivac has become so complex as to achieve a form of sapience itself, and to form its own wishes and desires.
To confirm his suspicion, Othman asks Multivac a question never previously posed to the vast computer, "Multivac, what do you yourself want more than anything else?". Multivac's answer is succinct and unequivocal: "I want to die."
Its outputs can be used chiefly to cast police suspicion upon citizens or they can be used to intervene in ways that help the people it identifies as being at-risk to avoid becoming criminals.
"Hey boys, threat alert is red! That means we can kill everyone in the building! Lock and load, let's roll!"
"...Even though it's not me that's the yellow guy, your officers are going to treat whoever comes out of that house in his boxer shorts as the yellow guy," Olivier said. "That may not be fair to me."
He added later: "[Beware] has failed right here with a council member as the example."
Talk about a new take on 'if you've done nothing you've got nothing to worry about'. It should blow whoever uses this argument right out of the conversation once and for all.
The story takes place in an authoritarian future dystopia, where omnipresent public sensors continuously scan the Psycho-Pass of every citizen in range. The sensors measure mental state, personality, and the probability that the citizen will commit crimes, alerting authorities when someone exceeds accepted norms.
While officers raced to a recent 911 call about a man threatening his ex-girlfriend, a police operator in headquarters consulted software that scored the suspect's potential for violence the way a bank might run a credit report.
Philip K. Dick. RIP.
Too bad the police in Fresno, California's Real Time Crime Center have no Dick.
He was the best.
Indeed. So many great books. Loved "Valis."
Dyer agreed. The scan returned Olivier as a green, but his home came back as a yellow, possibly because of someone who previously lived at his address, a police official said.
Out of an abundance of caution, the council meeting was put on lockdown and Olivier's assets were seized.
Hey, if it means cops get home safe? or something.
We'll call it.... Minorities Report.
Thread over
How about Person of Interest?
PoC of Interest.
That age old problem over free-will, now solved!
the intelligence helped them make the right call ? it turned out he had a gun.
So, common sense gun control?
Yeah, I was wondering what having a gun has to do with anything.
"I was wondering what having a gun has to do with anything."
It means he could have shot the dog if he wanted to.
if he wanted to shoot the dog, he wouldn't call the cops to do it for him.
Having a gun gives the cops a green light to open fire. The software saved the dude's life.
It searches social media postings... does that include Reason If so, I'm in trouble.
OH, yes.
Aren't we all?
Don't worry. If you post here you are already on a watch list somewhere.
It searches Reason postings first.
Think of the false positives just from the squirrels.
"Oh, we account for that. Nothing can go wrong can go wrong can go wrong."
it turned out he had a gun.
*shits pants*
"[Beware] has failed right here with a council member as the example."
They should have run a profile of Obama or Hillary.
Just for lulz, of course.
he would just blame it on the previous occupant.
Given the cumulative history of its previous inhabitants, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. should definitely throw up a code red.
Computer says no.
https://youtu.be/I3IxMQsazAM?t=16
You neve know, the problem may just correct itself...
http://tinyurl.com/k238zhs
He Cray Cray!
+1 Dewar
Shit man, that's easy.
Delete Multivac, load an earlier image, continue on.
He still won't open the fucking pod bay doors!
I wonder what the computer would say if a high-ranking government official ignored policy and set up their own unsecure email server in their house.
"She has a gun."
Totally honest mistake
Directive 4
Its outputs can be used chiefly to cast police suspicion upon citizens or they can be used to intervene in ways that help the people it identifies as being at-risk to avoid becoming criminals.
"Hey boys, threat alert is red! That means we can kill everyone in the building! Lock and load, let's roll!"
"...Even though it's not me that's the yellow guy, your officers are going to treat whoever comes out of that house in his boxer shorts as the yellow guy," Olivier said. "That may not be fair to me."
He added later: "[Beware] has failed right here with a council member as the example."
Talk about a new take on 'if you've done nothing you've got nothing to worry about'. It should blow whoever uses this argument right out of the conversation once and for all.
Scary shit.
Your being watched,the government has a machine,it sees everything,you'll never find us,we'll find you.
Beware can calculate a criminal risk score for any residents of Fresno
Now you have a FICO score and a FYTW score.
It's Fresno so, I'm guessing the average score is a nice deep burgundy.
Any yellow or green is obviously a false negative.
Will Harold Finch send Sarah Shahi after me? If so I'm in.
In what?
How does the fact it identified an elected politician as less trustworthy constitute failing?
It double failed.
It marked the politician as *green* and then the house as yellow - due to a prior resident.
That they cancel out just means the system got lucky.
Beware can calculate a criminal risk score for any residents of Fresno
Hmm. Beware resides in Fresno, doesn't it?
How long until someone's Red score on this software is used as an excuse to light him up on sight?
Gun laws themselves are precrime. The idea seems to be that having them could lead to an actual crime of shooting. So are drug laws and many others.
Sp is having a penis.
I've got your felony right here baby
Seems that TSA and NSA are there already too.
int ThreatManager::getThreatLevel(const Identity& identity) const
{
// Optimization.
if (identity.knownHosts.indexOf("reason.com"))
return THREAT_LEVEL_RED;
// Really do the calculation (NOTE: expensive).
return calculateThreatLevel(identity);
}
"I see nothing wrong with this" - Harry Tuttle
Confused. If I am a threat they bring a negotiator and don't shoot me? Otherwise the untrained cops show up and do whatever they want?
Just going to leave this here (actually relevant) : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psycho-Pass
Kokas adalah batu bara yang telah diproses (disuling kering) sehingga dapatmenghasilkan panas yang tinggi.
konstruksi baja pekanbaru
jasa konstruksi besi baja
While officers raced to a recent 911 call about a man threatening his ex-girlfriend, a police operator in headquarters consulted software that scored the suspect's potential for violence the way a bank might run a credit report.
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