New Orleans police use of facial recognition nets zero arrests in nine months - Louisiana Illuminator
lailluminator.com
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Facial recognition technology was used by the New Orleans Police Department only 13 times from Oct. 1, 2022, to July 1, 2023.
@DaveNa@lemmy.ml
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-51Y

And this is lemmy, a propaganda platform. That site cited as news. First source, no link. 2nd source, another “news website.” 3rd source, Twitter. Half the article, opinion. OK. I’ll see myself out, thank you very much.

@scottywh@lemmy.world
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21Y

Accusing a site you’re participating in of being a “propaganda platform” is a new strategy… Let’s see how it works out for them, Cotton…

@old_ghost@lemmy.world
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5
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1Y

deleted by creator

The current state of policing doesn’t deserve to have access to this kinda shit. Hopefully it never will tbh.

NOPD is a joke to begin with.

Surprise surprise!

@agitatedpotato@lemmy.world
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33
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1Y

The terrifying part to me is that cops across the nation have a long history of seeing that the tech they want to use is unreliable and based on junky science, but they still push it through anyway. Aren’t police dogs about as reliable as a coin-flip when their handlers aren’t nipping at their neck to get them to jump at anything? They don’t care if it’s right as long as they can use it to justify their behavior, so they make it policy.

@_number8_@lemmy.world
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21Y

if you think it’s good that cops have more tech you are the dumbest fucking hog imaginable

@SangriaFerret@lemmy.world
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9
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1Y

Tbf, NOPD don’t arrest many people anyway. There’s a massive cop shortage, only 944 officers for a city of 364,000 with skyrocketing crime rates. Moreover, they’ve been operating under a consent decree by the DOJ since 2012. They’re overworked, underpaid and under the thumb of the feds so in response they simply don’t do shit.

Good.

TurtleJoe
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91Y

The cops in my city were under a DOJ consent decree for like 20 years, and it didn’t make them any less effective. They’re actually worse now, because they actively don’t give a fuck.

iquanyin
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71Y

lots of nice biometric additions to the database tho, right? 😠

People may see this as a “see, AI isn’t that good”. We all need to rail against these kinds of programs to the point they are made illegal. Because there are examples around the world of being able to track people with facial recognition (and even by the way someone walks with their face entirely covered 0_0)

I see this as the new Orleans police dep hired a inept contractor (or did an inept job in house).

Around the world, we must fight against all inappropriate data harvesting.

@Misconduct@lemmy.world
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6
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1Y

With all the laws trying to put women into basically servitude I’m definitely on team rail against. There are a lot of types of “criminals” that need to be able to get away from law enforcement these days unfortunately. Honestly I’d prefer they just keep being inept for now lol

@quicksand@lemmy.world
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81Y

When I walk into the building I work at there is a disclaimer that they are using facial recognition. I don’t know if this is reality or a scare tactic, but based on the industry I would assume they’re just using it for free AI training

@RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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11Y

You should walk out when you see those signs.

@bob_wiley@lemmy.world
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8
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1Y

deleted by creator

Flying Squid
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471Y

Huh. It’s almost like cops are constantly wasting money on bullshit.

iquanyin
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131Y

only if it’s ours, of course

@Mdotaut801@lemmy.world
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31Y

Well here’s the issue….police officers are using it.

I mean, law enforcement occasionally uses polygraph tests in their investigations even though that type of “evidence” isn’t admissible in court and, to be honest, what kind of scientific credibility does a piece of technology like a polygraph even have? They’ll use whatever they can get their hands on even if it’s questionable. Some police forces probably even have a psychic consultant or something. It scares me.

@Soggy@lemmy.world
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31Y

They’ll use it especially if it’s questionable, like handwriting analysis, because the goal is arrests not correct arrests. Trumped up, flimsy, circumstantial “evidence” is the best kind when you don’t actually want to do your job.

Yeah, it goes along with the low standards that define probable cause. Policing, just like a lot of professions, is subject to bean counting when bean counting is not appropriate. Voters love to see statistics that flaunt “more arrests.” Funny how people love numbers without really understanding what the numbers mean.

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