A Japanese Tech Company Claims It Can Predict Crimes Before They Happen
It's understandable to be sceptical of Hitachi's new system, but Darrin Lipscomb, an executive in Hitachi's Public Safety and Visualization division, seems more than confident in the technology. "A human just can't handle when you get to the tens or hundreds of variables that could impact crime," said Lipscomb.
And not only that, but Hitachi executives seem to think that, by simply using statistics to determine crime rather than the "instinct" of a certain officer, the HVPCA could potentially cut down on a very real issue here in America: police profiling. But couldn't such an inhuman approach to something as simply human as crime actually be a step back? Quartz'z Amy X. Wang argues that it very well may be.
"Hitachi's system, which the company plans to put into a trial run at police departments in a handful of unspecified cities starting in October, raises two major concerns," she writes.
"1) How accurate will the system be, and 2) What if the system unfairly profiles and targets innocent people as criminals?"
I don't know what she's so nervous about; it all seemed to work out fine for John Anderton, right? (Confession: I have neither seen nor read Minority Report.)
Source: Quartz [http://qz.com/513125/hitachi-says-it-can-predict-crimes-before-they-happen/]
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It's understandable to be sceptical of Hitachi's new system, but Darrin Lipscomb, an executive in Hitachi's Public Safety and Visualization division, seems more than confident in the technology. "A human just can't handle when you get to the tens or hundreds of variables that could impact crime," said Lipscomb.
And not only that, but Hitachi executives seem to think that, by simply using statistics to determine crime rather than the "instinct" of a certain officer, the HVPCA could potentially cut down on a very real issue here in America: police profiling. But couldn't such an inhuman approach to something as simply human as crime actually be a step back? Quartz'z Amy X. Wang argues that it very well may be.
"Hitachi's system, which the company plans to put into a trial run at police departments in a handful of unspecified cities starting in October, raises two major concerns," she writes.
"1) How accurate will the system be, and 2) What if the system unfairly profiles and targets innocent people as criminals?"
I don't know what she's so nervous about; it all seemed to work out fine for John Anderton, right? (Confession: I have neither seen nor read Minority Report.)
Source: Quartz [http://qz.com/513125/hitachi-says-it-can-predict-crimes-before-they-happen/]
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