IBM Remains at Cutting Edge of Human Rights Violations

I originally posted the following information and commentary onto my Facebook wall…

“NYPD Counterterrorism”

IBM Used NYPD Surveillance Footage to Develop Technology That Lets Police Search by Skin Color:
https://theintercept.com/2018/09/06/nypd-surveillance-camera-skin-tone-search/

(George Joseph, Kenneth Lipp) In the decade after the 9/11 attacks, the New York City Police Department moved to put millions of New Yorkers under constant watch. Warning of terrorism threats, the department created a plan to carpet Manhattan’s downtown streets with thousands of cameras and had, by 2008, centralized its video surveillance operations to a single command center. Two years later, the NYPD announced that the command center, known as the Lower Manhattan Security Coordination Center, had integrated cutting-edge video analytics software into select cameras across the city.

(Read entire article here…)

My Commentary: This company is always at the cutting-edge of human rights violations.

IBM Collaborated with Nazis, Used Technology to Process Concentration-Camp-Victim Data During WWII:
http://acidrayn.com/2009/11/03/the-corporation-taking-the-right-side-documentary-clip/

With U.S. Already Enforcing Pre-Crime Laws Everywhere, Researchers Now Warn that Artificial Intelligence Will Soon Be Used By Police to Further Same Goal

I originally posted the following information and commentary onto my Facebook wall…

2016-09-13-with-u-s-already-enforcing-pre-crime-laws-everywhere-researchers-now-warn-that-artificial-intelligence-will-soon-be-used-by-police-to-further-same-goal

Stanford Researchers Warn U.S. — Cops Already Using AI to Stop Crimes BEFORE They Happen:
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/pre-crime-cops-ai/

(Claire Bernish) Pre-crime, a term coined by science fiction author Philip K. Dick and loosely described as the use of artificial intelligence to detect and stop crime before it happens, has become a terrifying reality — and will likely be business-as-usual for police in just 15 years.

“Cities have already begun to deploy AI technologies for public safety and security,” a team of academic researchers wrote in a new report titled Artificial Intelligence and Life in 2030. “By 2030, the typical North American city will rely heavily upon them. These include cameras for surveillance that can detect anomalies pointing to a possible crime, drones, and predictive policing applications.”

First in an ongoing series for the Stanford University-hosted One Hundred Year Study on Artificial Intelligence (AI 100), the report is intended to spark debate on the benefits and detriments of AI’s growing presence in society — and, as in the area of law enforcement, the removal of the human factor won’t necessarily end well.

(Read entire article here…)

My Commentary: No surprise, since we already have pre-crime laws all throughout the US.