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May 5, 2018
05/18
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the durham constabulary's contract with experian has come to an end.has been assessed and accepted into the checkpoint programme. he ended up spending around eight hours in police custody. i will grab my stuff, come round the front and give you a lift. yeah, we'll go out the front. what is the future of this kind of technology? in terms of how i see it developing, i think over the next five years there will be a proliferation of these kind of tools, i think, going forward, society will come to accept them more, but human beings, government, society, needs to stamp its foot a little bit about it. and the reason i say that is because we need to have more regulation. it's taken me about a decade working in this field to realise that the real question is, what i always called the "now what" question. i can build you a model that will predict whatever outcome you're interested in, criminal justice—wise, but what areyou going to do with it? once that box comes back and you have a red box on your computer screen that says "high risk" — now what? hello and wel
the durham constabulary's contract with experian has come to an end.has been assessed and accepted into the checkpoint programme. he ended up spending around eight hours in police custody. i will grab my stuff, come round the front and give you a lift. yeah, we'll go out the front. what is the future of this kind of technology? in terms of how i see it developing, i think over the next five years there will be a proliferation of these kind of tools, i think, going forward, society will come to...
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May 5, 2018
05/18
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the durham constabulary's contract with experian has come to an end.d accepted into the checkpoint programme. he and spending around eight hours in police custody. programme. he and spending around eight hours in police custodylj will eight hours in police custody.” will grab eight hours in police custody.” willgraba eight hours in police custody.” will grab a stuff, come round the front and give you a lift. what is the future of this kind of technology? i think over the next five years there will be a proliferation of these kind of tools, i think going forward society will come to accept them or, but the human beings, government, society, needs to stamp its foot little bit about it. and the reason i say that is because we need to have more regulation. it has taken me about a decade working in this field to realise that the real question is, what i always called the "now what" question. i will build your model that will predict whatever model you wa nt that will predict whatever model you want incremental justice, but that will predict whatever model y
the durham constabulary's contract with experian has come to an end.d accepted into the checkpoint programme. he and spending around eight hours in police custody. programme. he and spending around eight hours in police custodylj will eight hours in police custody.” will grab eight hours in police custody.” willgraba eight hours in police custody.” will grab a stuff, come round the front and give you a lift. what is the future of this kind of technology? i think over the next five years...
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May 7, 2018
05/18
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the durham constabulary's contract with experian has come to an end. into the checkpoint programme. spending around eight hours in police custody. and we'll give you a lift. yeah, we'll go out the front. what is the future of this kind of technology? needs to stamp its foot a little bit about it. to have more regulation. the "now what" question. but what areyou going to do with it? on your computer screen that says "high risk" — now what? hello and welcome to the week in tech. a virtualjump off the top — should you choose to accept it. cambridge analytica shut down. ford revealed it's planning to let the blind see through car windows. the scene is where you touch it. what they're looking at. owners facebook are trying to commercialise users' data. an ai camera with 19 shooting modes. don't worry, the ai picks the one you're most likely to need. beautiful epic fail ever. flown simultaneously. the problem? number of drones perfectly. south china morning post. tough crowd! no—one has more personal data on you and me than you—know—who. they were telling us their plans for the platform f
the durham constabulary's contract with experian has come to an end. into the checkpoint programme. spending around eight hours in police custody. and we'll give you a lift. yeah, we'll go out the front. what is the future of this kind of technology? needs to stamp its foot a little bit about it. to have more regulation. the "now what" question. but what areyou going to do with it? on your computer screen that says "high risk" — now what? hello and welcome to the week in...
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May 5, 2018
05/18
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BBCNEWS
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the ai assesses the data that durham constabulary holds on him and makes this recommendation.nter checkpoint if it rates him as a moderate risk. everyone who works with the hart project i spoke to is keen to stress that the information it provides is advisory only and the human custody sergeant makes all the final decisions. but the use of this technology in general is, for some people, cause for concern. this kind of artificial intelligence system in policing relies on big data. and that means people's privacy is at risk, and it risks us moving more towards a surveillance state. but it also risks discrimination, because patterns that exist in data already risk being perpetuated and repeated. and there is very little accountability over it. cambridge university's criminology lab is the birthplace of technology being used by the police in durham. it has been in development for five years. the decisions that hart makes are based on historical data. it uses this information to predict the future outcomes. our artificial intelligence, is looking to the past and the patterns we hav
the ai assesses the data that durham constabulary holds on him and makes this recommendation.nter checkpoint if it rates him as a moderate risk. everyone who works with the hart project i spoke to is keen to stress that the information it provides is advisory only and the human custody sergeant makes all the final decisions. but the use of this technology in general is, for some people, cause for concern. this kind of artificial intelligence system in policing relies on big data. and that means...
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May 6, 2018
05/18
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BBCNEWS
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the ai assesses the data durham constabulary holds on him and makes its recommendation.it provides is advisory only and that a human custody sergeant makes all final decisions. but the use of this technology in general is, for some people, a cause for concern. this kind of artificial intelligence system in policing relies on big data. and that means that people's privacy is at risk, and it risks us moving more towards a surveillance state. but it also risks discrimination because patterns that exist in data already risk being perpetuated and repeated and there is very little accountability over it. cambridge university's criminology lab is the birthplace of the technology being used by the police in durham. it has been in development for five years. the decisions that hart makes are based on historical data. it uses this information to predict future outcomes. our artificial intelligence regards as whether it's criminaljustice or somewhere else, is building, it's looking to the past and the patterns that were observed in the past to predict the future. and we know the pa
the ai assesses the data durham constabulary holds on him and makes its recommendation.it provides is advisory only and that a human custody sergeant makes all final decisions. but the use of this technology in general is, for some people, a cause for concern. this kind of artificial intelligence system in policing relies on big data. and that means that people's privacy is at risk, and it risks us moving more towards a surveillance state. but it also risks discrimination because patterns that...
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May 25, 2018
05/18
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that is just coming in from durham constabulary. the headlines on bbc newsroom live...r old d—day veteranjim booth after repeatedly hitting him on the head with a hammer. scotland's first minister nicola sturgeon says a new report out today will "restart the debate" about scottish independence good afternoon. a big weekend of spot ahead. the champions league final on saturday. over an hour gone on the second morning of the first test at lords, and england's bowlers have finally made a breakthrouugh after pakistan resumed this morning on 50—1. it came from mark wood, who who took the wicket of haris sohailfor 39, jonny bairstow taking the catch. the touring side have moved onto 101 for 2 a short while ago. former captain top scoring with 70. rory mcilroy has continued his good run at the pga championship at wentworth. he shot a 5 under 67 on thursday, and has now moved onto 12 under par with 7 birdies and no dropped shots after 16 holes of his second round. swedish ryder cup hopeful alex noren is also in contention. rory mcilroy going well on 12 under par. world champion
that is just coming in from durham constabulary. the headlines on bbc newsroom live...r old d—day veteranjim booth after repeatedly hitting him on the head with a hammer. scotland's first minister nicola sturgeon says a new report out today will "restart the debate" about scottish independence good afternoon. a big weekend of spot ahead. the champions league final on saturday. over an hour gone on the second morning of the first test at lords, and england's bowlers have finally made...