| ▲ | pj_mukh 5 hours ago | |||||||
all accountability need not be punitive, we can certainly talk about systemic guardrails. What I find disbelief in, is someone saying the Chief of Police saying "We are not going to talk about that today?" is not the biggest scandal, but the AI is. | ||||||||
| ▲ | caconym_ 4 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> someone saying the Chief of Police saying "We are not going to talk about that today?" is not the biggest scandal, but the AI is. Who is this "someone"? OP's article and the discussion here are absolutely not neglecting the human factors and general institutional failure that made this possible. But it's also true that without these "AI" tools, it would never have happened. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | toraway 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
From the same article... He spearheaded a push to "leverage technology and data to support officers in responding more effectively to incidents", then that same technology mistakingly ruins a woman's life by passing along a hit to an officer who compared with her FB photos and said "sure, seems right".The technology seems highly relevant here. Plus, as we've seen in the software world, when a mandate comes from the top to use the shiny new magic AI tools as much as possible, the officer may have felt pressured to make arrests using the new system they paid a bunch of money for instead of second guessing whatever it spits out. | ||||||||