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Message

Minority Report secretly experimenting in NOLA.
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:37 am
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:37 am
Of all places. Still, Philip K. Dick (and more recently, Mark Cuban) warned us years ago.
LINK
quote:What follows in a super long article that is actually very fascinating and disturbing if you take time later to read it. We always joke about Skynet and frickbots taking over the world, but this seems to be far more possible and immediately real.
PALANTIR HAS SECRETLY BEEN USING NEW ORLEANS TO TEST ITS PREDICTIVE POLICING TECHNOLOGY
n May and June 2013, when New Orleans’ murder rate was the sixth-highest in the United States, the Orleans Parish district attorney handed down two landmark racketeering indictments against dozens of men accused of membership in two violent Central City drug trafficking gangs, 3NG and the 110ers. Members of both gangs stood accused of committing 25 murders as well as several attempted killings and armed robberies.
Subsequent investigations by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and local agencies produced further RICO indictments, including that of a 22-year-old man named Evans “Easy” Lewis, a member of a gang called the 39ers who was accused of participating in a drug distribution ring and several murders.
According to Ronal Serpas, the department’s chief at the time, one of the tools used by the New Orleans Police Department to identify members of gangs like 3NG and the 39ers came from the Silicon Valley company Palantir. The company provided software to a secretive NOPD program that traced people’s ties to other gang members, outlined criminal histories, analyzed social media, and predicted the likelihood that individuals would commit violence or become a victim. As part of the discovery process in Lewis’ trial, the government turned over more than 60,000 pages of documents detailing evidence gathered against him from confidential informants, ballistics, and other sources — but they made no mention of the NOPD’s partnership with Palantir, according to a source familiar with the 39ers trial.
LINK
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:39 am to blueboy
Doing a real bang up job down there 
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:39 am to blueboy
That's pretty crazy to think about
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:39 am to blueboy
But it's social media. Nothing "private".
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:40 am to blueboy
Does the software cause people to commit crimes?
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:41 am to blueboy
quote:
PALANTIR
Tolkien nerds...
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:43 am to blueboy
quote:
PALANTIR
To me, that is the coolest name for a company ever.
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:45 am to blueboy
When you look at google, amazon, facebook, etc., they do a good job of showing you items and news that you would like. The machine learning power is amazing now and humans are creatures of habit programmed to follow certain paths.
Our ability to store and decipher the astronomical amount of data we have is both amazing and scary. Once we get around the feels of true profiling, they can actually prevent many crimes.
Our ability to store and decipher the astronomical amount of data we have is both amazing and scary. Once we get around the feels of true profiling, they can actually prevent many crimes.
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:46 am to blueboy
quote:
May and June 2013, when New Orleans’ murder rate was the sixth-highest in the United States,
The software must be doing a bang up job, we were the fourth highest in 2015
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:46 am to blueboy
If they're dumb enough to willingly put things on the internet that implicate them we should be able to develop tools that can use that info to lock them up and keep them from committing future crimes.
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:47 am to CoachChappy
quote:
To me, that is the coolest name for a company ever.
For a program that lets you see all, yup

Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:47 am to DarthRebel
The homeless people can already tell where you got your shoes, so it make sense they could tell where crime was going to happen.
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:48 am to blueboy
Once the SJWs discover that this technology proves stereotypes are generally correct they will attempt to outlaw this technology....unless it's used against conservatives.
Posted on 2/28/18 at 9:52 am to blueboy
I would have never thought the gangbangers that post pictures online showing off their guns would be more likely to commit crimes
Posted on 2/28/18 at 10:08 am to DarthRebel
quote:Wow, that's fricking brilliant. And even though no crime will have been committed, they can live happily under the umbrella of "because we prevented it."
Our ability to store and decipher the astronomical amount of data we have is both amazing and scary. Once we get around the feels of true profiling, they can actually prevent many crimes.
Meanwhile, Uncle Rupert gets hauled off to federal prison because he called Obama a fig on Facebook.
This post was edited on 2/28/18 at 10:27 am
Posted on 2/28/18 at 10:15 am to blueboy
Uncle Rupert sounds like a dick
Posted on 2/28/18 at 10:18 am to crispyUGA
quote:
quote:
PALANTIR
Tolkien nerds...
If we're having a secret meeting, I want my code name to be feanor
Posted on 2/28/18 at 10:23 am to blueboy
quote:
Wow, that's fricking brilliant. And since no crime will have been committed, they can live happily under the umbrella of "because we prevented it."
Meanwhile, Uncle Rupert gets hauled off to federal prison because he called Obama a fig on Facebook.
You read that all wrong, sorry for not being clearer.
We are not talking prevention by arresting people without a crime committed. It is more having resources where they are needed, even if they pool up in certain areas compared to others.
Everyone wants the law to be blind and balanced, however she has a good idea where crimes are going down.
The obvious example is the stupidity of TSA and their random pat downs.
The patterns mean everything in predictive analytics. There are always outliers, but accuracy is pretty high and increases as more data points are entered.
Posted on 2/28/18 at 10:28 am to DarthRebel
quote:Yeah. Meanwhile, people will go to jail for nothing.
The patterns mean everything in predictive analytics. There are always outliers, but accuracy is pretty high and increases as more data points are entered.
And as the other poster stated, when the roulette wheel keeps landing on black, well, that just won't be acceptable.
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