2024-10-01
33 分钟Police departments across the country are testing generative AI and large language model software to see if they can cut down on the time officers spend writing reports. But AI seems to have this way of always surprising us, and the benefits it brings to police may have nothing to do with time.
From recorded future News, I'm Dina Temple Raston, and this is click here.
Over the past year or so, all we've been hearing is about artificial intelligence and the many ways it's going to change the world.
44% of american teenagers say that they're.
Likely to use AI tools when completing assignments.
We're about to head into a real life brain surgery to see how they're using AI to help get patients to.
Diagnose this faster new technology that promises to make farms more efficient, productive, and profitable, thanks to artificial intelligence.
And now AI has found its way into something fundamental to our judicial system.
Police reports.
Which left Ian Adams, who studies the intersection of policing and technology, a little skeptical.
There's technology in the abstract, right?
Its promises, how people think it might be used.
But when it meets the realities of policing, it almost invariably becomes changed.
It's almost a never ending puzzle of complications and difficulties in implementation.
And it's always going to be interesting.
He was a cop in Utah for about twelve years, and he's seen a whole raft of technologies rise and fall, and for some of them, he was even an early adopter.
I was one of the first officers to sort of use a body worn camera back in the day, starting like, you know, the 2011 era when they were testing units.
So by the time they became a big part of the national conversation, I was pretty experienced with them.
And I heard people and especially academics, talking about the camera in a way that didn't make a lot of sense to me.
People just assumed that the accountability of a body cam was going to reduce the use of force by police officers, because the thinking went, if police were being watched or recorded, it would change the way they'd acted.
But for Ian Adams, that just didn't ring true.