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AI Identifies Sex From Skulls Faster and More Accurately Than Experts by James Mills by James Mills Artificial intelligence has exceeded human capabilities in yet another area. AI has surpassed human forensic experts in determining biological sex from skeletal remains. Forensic anthropologists traditionally analyze human skeletons to estimate age, lifestyle, …
Article • November 1, 2023 • from CLN November, 2023
Facial Recognition Software Gives Unreliable Results with Black Individuals and Leads to Unlawful Arrests by Jo Ellen Nott by Jo Ellen Nott Two faculty members at Georgia State University in Atlanta in the Department of Criminal Justice & Criminology wrote in the May 18, 2023, edition of Scientific American Technology …
New Montana Law Bans Warrantless Facial Recognition Surveillance by Jordan Arizmendi by Jordan Arizmendi At the end of June 2023, Montana Governor Greg Gianforte signed a bill, Senate Bill 397 (“SB397”) that will ban warrantless facial recognition surveillance, generally. According to the law, the exceptions that would permit a law …
Article • September 1, 2023 • from CLN September, 2023
The Two Faces of the FBI and DOD Facial Recognition Program by Carlo Difundo by Carlos Difundo It is a trope of the modern spy thriller. A drone flies overhead and captures a fleeting glimpse of some person of interest. The image begins as a pixelated blur from far above. …
Article • June 15, 2023 • from CLN July, 2023
Police Sketch Bot Arrives by Carlo Difundo by Carlos Difundo It is one of those things that seems to be a great idea at first. Once in place though, it becomes something very different. That happened when two coders created Forensic Sketch AI-rtist. The tool was simple enough given the …
Article • June 15, 2023 • from CLN July, 2023
New Orleans Authorizes Facial Recognition to Identity Suspects by Michael Thompson by Michael Dean Thompson The use of facial recognition systems was banned by the New Orleans City Council in 2020, only to be overturned in July of 2022 in response to fears of rising crime despite concerns within the …
Article • May 15, 2023
Police’s Limited Understanding of AI Tools Raises Concerns, Study Finds by Miles Dyson by Miles Dyson The increasing use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) tools in policing is raising concerns over the limited understanding of these technologies among law enforcement agencies, according to a recent study. As AI continues to play …
Article • April 9, 2023
Filed under: EP2P Software, Social Media
AI Company Scraped 30 Billion Facebook Pictures and Sold Them to the Cops by Jordan Arizmendi by Jordan Arizmendi Clearview AI is a surveillance technology used by at least 2,400 law enforcement agencies. Its CEO Hoan Ton-That recently said, in a BBC interview, that Clearview AI has fed its AI …
Article • March 15, 2023 • from CLN April, 2023
Filed under: EP2P Software
TSA Using Facial Recognition at Airports in Pilot Program by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso The Transportation Security Administration (“TSA”) is now using a facial recognition system to check the IDs of airline travelers at select airports to assess whether the system should be deployed nationwide.  The TSA checks …
Article • November 15, 2022 • from CLN December, 2022
Next Gen Facial Recognition Identifies Your Associates, Too by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso A company called Ventra in February 2022 presented its new facial recognition software that rapidly searches voluminous video footage for a face and then identifies the faces of other people who came in contact with …
The Clash Between Closed-Source Forensic Tools and the Confrontation Clause by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso Technology companies and prosecutors are working together to assert the right of the companies to protect their intellectual property in ways that deny criminal defendants their right to challenge the reliability of forensic …
Article • April 15, 2021 • from CLN May, 2021
Filed under: junk science, EP2P Software
New Jersey Appellate Court Holds Defendant Entitled to Source Code of Novel Probabilistic Genotyping Software Upon Showing of Particularized Need by Douglas Ankney by Douglas Ankney In a case of first impression, the Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division, held that when the State chooses to utilize an expert …
Article • December 23, 2020
Filed under: EP2P Software
LAPD Finally Admits to Using Controversial Facial Recognition Software, After Denying it for 10 Years by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell The Los Angeles Police Department (“LAPD”) denied for over a decade that it used facial recognition software. It even boldly said it never used facial recognition when responding to …
Article • December 15, 2020 • from CLN January, 2021
Futuristic Crime Predictor Targets, Monitors People Across Florida County by David Reutter by David M. Reutter When Chris Nocco was appointed sheriff of Florida’s Pasco County, he said the agency would be “proactive” in reducing property crimes. His intelligence-led policing model would use data to predict where future crimes would …
Article • November 26, 2020
Study Finds Combination of Experts and Algorithms are Better at Recognizing Faces by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell I have to admit, I would be the worst witness in court, because it seems I can’t recall a face I’ve seen even a hundred times. However, there are some people who …
Article • October 15, 2020 • from CLN November, 2020
Powerful New Tool Reveals Federal Sentencing Problems by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell A powerful new database combines data from multiple sources in order to provide more useful information about federal sentencing. The ground-breaking service is a first of its kind and has been an eye-opener about what’s really going …
Problems With Predictive Policing by Jayson Hawkins by Jayson Hawkins Phillip K. Dick made the concept of “pre-crime” famous in his novel Minority Report, which described a future where people with “pre-cognitive” abilities could predict a crime and those predictions were used to arrest and convict “offenders.” Without the luxury …
Article • July 15, 2020 • from CLN August, 2020
Filed under: junk science, EP2P Software
Government Study Finds Facial Recognition Sorely Lacking in Accuracy by Dale Chappell by Dale Chappell A study by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (“NIST”), a non-biased government agency that does independent testing on various technologies and industries, has found that facial recognition software used to identify criminal suspects …
Article • June 15, 2020 • from CLN July, 2020
Report: Risk Assessment Tools not Effective, Especially When not Used by Kevin Bliss by Kevin Bliss Risk assessment tools are not effectively reducing pretrial detention or prejudicial profiling practices in determining bail. In addition, few counties concern themselves with the effectiveness of such programs, not even bothering to monitor their …