California City Bans Predictive Policing In US First

DEAD7

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California City Bans Predictive Policing In US First


As officials mull steps to tackle police brutality and racism, California's Santa Cruz has become the first U.S. city to ban predictive policing, which digital rights experts said could spark similar moves across the country. "Understanding how predictive policing and facial recognition can be disportionately biased against people of color, we officially banned the use of these technologies in the city of Santa Cruz," Mayor Justin Cummings said on Wednesday. His administration will work with the police to "help eliminate racism in policing", the seaside city's first male African-American mayor said on his Facebook page, following a vote on Tuesday evening.

Used by police across the United States for almost a decade, predictive policing relies on algorithms to interpret police records, analyzing arrest or parole data to send officers to target chronic offenders, or identifying places where crime may occur. But critics says it reinforces racist patterns of policing -- low-income, ethnic minority neighborhoods have historically been overpoliced so the data shows them as crime hotspots, leading to the deployment of more police to those areas.
 

DEAD7

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Why?

Seems good right? Or you dont have faith in it becoming a national trend?
Its just another in a long line of reforms/proposed reforms that dont address officer accountability.

predictive reforms, military equipment reforms, training reforms, procedural reforms...:camby:
 

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Its just another in a long line of reforms/proposed reforms that dont address officer accountability.

predictive reforms, military equipment reforms, training reforms, procedural reforms...:camby:
I agree. They want us to believe that if we merely take their toys away they'll change their behavior :stop:
 

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I agree. They want us to believe that if we merely take their toys away they'll change their behavior :stop:
I seee it as delaying it until "it's" needed.

For example a lot of AI and facial recognition software has reemerged due its usage for being able to detect a fever, but prior to an extreme circumstance, software like this used on the general public would seem like a breach of freedom.

I imagine predictive policing will follow a similar path. All takes is a few serial killers or something major to reshape the narrative for its usage.
 
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Kenny West

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Its just another in a long line of reforms/proposed reforms that dont address officer accountability.

predictive reforms, military equipment reforms, training reforms, procedural reforms...:camby:
Oh the timing

I assumed we were discussing the technology here. Lol if this itself is their only "reform"
 
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