"The specter of student violence is pushing school 
leaders across the country to turn their campuses into surveillance 
testing grounds on the hope it’ll help them detect dangerous people 
they’d otherwise miss. The supporters and designers of Avigilon, the AI 
service bought for $1 billion last year by tech giant Motorola 
Solutions, say its security algorithms could spot risky behavior with 
superhuman speed and precision, potentially preventing another attack.
But
 the advanced monitoring technologies ensure that the daily lives of 
American schoolchildren are subjected to close scrutiny from systems 
that will automatically flag certain students as suspicious, potentially
 spurring a response from security or police forces, based on the work 
of algorithms that are hidden from public view.
The
 camera software has no proven track record for preventing school 
violence, some technology and civil liberties experts argue. And the 
testing of their algorithms for bias and accuracy — how confident the 
systems are in identifying possible threats — has largely been conducted
 by the companies themselves."
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.