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Calculating risks: Although the concept can be traced back to earlier literary works and philosophical discussions, the movie Minority Report brought the idea of authorities stopping crimes before they happen into the mainstream. Now, that vision may soon become a reality, thanks to researchers in South Korea. The country's Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute has unveiled "Dejaview" – an AI system that analyzes CCTV footage to detect and potentially prevent criminal activity.

Dejaview uses machine learning to analyze patterns and identify signs of impending crimes. It considers factors like time of day, location, past incident records, and other variables to assess the risk of something suspicious occurring.

According to a report by TechXplore, the core technology operates in two key ways. First, there's a time/space-based prediction model that evaluates elements such as whether a crime previously occurred in a remote area late at night.

For instance, if a quiet, isolated location shares similar environmental factors with a past late-night crime, the system assesses a high risk of another incident.

Authorities can then proactively monitor those high-risk zones more closely through CCTV feeds to prevent incidents before they start and position response teams appropriately. In field tests working with local Seocho city data, this "predictive crime mapping" system demonstrated an accuracy of 82.8%.

The second component of Dejaview is called 'individual-centered recidivism prediction.' It zeros in on individuals considered "high risk" for repeating the same offenses. By tracking their movement patterns, the technology can analyze whether their behavior signals they might commit another crime soon.

As for how Dejaview acquired its smarts, the technology was trained on a massive dataset of over 32,000 CCTV clips capturing various incidents across a three-year span. The AI learned to recognize patterns from this data, and now applies that 'knowledge' to live scenarios.

Of course, the Orwellian implications of AI-powered crime prediction will surely stir debate, especially when it comes to tracking individuals. For now, ETRI appears to be limiting Dejaview's application to public safety infrastructure like airports, energy facilities, factories, and national event monitoring. Commercial use for specialized security agencies is expected by the end of 2025.

South Korea isn't alone in exploring this technology. Argentina has also established a new AI unit aimed at preventing, detecting, investigating, and prosecuting criminals using specialized algorithms. Argentina's approach goes a step further by analyzing data beyond CCTV, including social media, websites, and even the dark web.

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I'd honestly be OK with this from the following perspective:

-Centered on high traffic urban areas.

-No one is arrested/stopped/questioned merely due to the predictive analytics. Put a cop on the scene and (assuming the cop actually does his job) arrest someone in event that an actual crime occurs.
 
I'd honestly be OK with this from the following perspective:

-Centered on high traffic urban areas.

-No one is arrested/stopped/questioned merely due to the predictive analytics. Put a cop on the scene and (assuming the cop actually does his job) arrest someone in event that an actual crime occurs.
NOPE. No way hombre. The possibility of this being abused is FAR too high to justify it. Both stipulations you cited would never ever be followed, and the data collected will be used to oppress. There is no way around it. The moment you start justifying "pre crime", that exact moment, your rights stop mattering.

Besides, this wont stop anything, even if it was used 100% properly. The issue isnt catching criminals, its that the courts, and the DAs, refuse to convict, or if they do, refuse to hand out lengthy jail sentences. At worse, they give probation for the 4th time, or more fines they never bother collecting, and said criminal goes right back out and does it again. Even if you fixed that, the prisons are all full.

That's why crime in American cities is such an issue. They use this "crisis" to justify implementing privacy invading tools like this that will fix nothing but gives the government more power to know everything about you.
 
This is gonna be a minefield in sensitive (western) countries. Racial profiling is gonna be the front and center issue.
 
Hey, Billy Bob, notice that there feller breaking windows on the jewelry store? Sho did Bubba. We gotta wait for Hal 2000 to confirm criminal intent.

How lazy are humans going to get? Damn. There are smart eager people looking for work. Let them stare at video feeds for pay, instead of standing in an unemployment line waiting to fill out forms that some fool AI will reject because it's far stupider than the powers that be think it is.
 
It reminds me of that feature that shows crimes on the map, making sure only specific types of people live in certain areas. Not appropriate in the modern society.
 
It reminds me of that feature that shows crimes on the map, making sure only specific types of people live in certain areas. Not appropriate in the modern society.
>commit crimes
>people with jobs do not wish to live in an area with crime
>muh modern society

Here's an idea, maybe if you dont want your neighborhood overrun with crime, dont commit crime? Criminal records are public and the public has a right to know when and where a crime occurred. Any modern society is going to avoid high crime areas because we have the ability to not be victims of crime. Nothing is stopping the people in these areas from wanting the same and fixing the problem.
 
Korean? Expect it to immediately discriminate against black people.
 
Imagine how much crime we could prevent if we put cameras everywhere and watched everyone all the time! - Excited Statist
 

Actually, poverty stops most of them… generally, the higher the crime rate, the cheaper the properties in that area… so rich people can afford to move away - poor people can’t…
Yep, they are destined to be born there, live their entire life and die there.
I remember a documentary of one of such places being destroyed completely, even though
it was filled with good buildings built not very long ago.
 
Yep, they are destined to be born there, live their entire life and die there.
I remember a documentary of one of such places being destroyed completely, even though
it was filled with good buildings built not very long ago.
I believe it was Detroit…
 
Vote ppl
/s
 
AI will never go away, debates will be a thing of the past, Orwellian what's that? As future generations will be assimilated into the AI World. The present is the test bed.
 
AI and EV's will only get better.
Might take a while but I'm excited.
 
>commit crimes
>people with jobs do not wish to live in an area with crime
>muh modern society

Here's an idea, maybe if you dont want your neighborhood overrun with crime, dont commit crime? Criminal records are public and the public has a right to know when and where a crime occurred. Any modern society is going to avoid high crime areas because we have the ability to not be victims of crime. Nothing is stopping the people in these areas from wanting the same and fixing the problem.

-Ironically, as you have outlined, people already use "predictive analytics" to avoid crime. Some might even call it... actual intelligence. Doesn't bring in the billions though.

If this system is implemented and crime goes down, then *shrugs*
 
Actually, poverty stops most of them… generally, the higher the crime rate, the cheaper the properties in that area… so rich people can afford to move away - poor people can’t…
I wonder what affect gentrification has on poverty and crime? It increases properties value but pushes lowest income earners away unless their is rent control or government housing/ shelters near by.
 
I'm just glad I'm in my mid 60's and (hopefully) won't live long enough to all this garbage to
take place. Cameras everywhere, AI this or that, restrictions on where you can go, what you
can view, what you can say...sad
 
The UK gov will love this.
 
Are we gonna have Minority Report live, not only a movie.
 
Cameras in public spaces are perfectly legal and there are no preemptive arrests. No rights being violated here. Smarter deployment of police leads to less crime and/or fewer police needed. The community gains better security and lower taxes, after all those officers stationed in safe spaces are still getting paid. If you are afraid of your privacy being invaded, throw away your smartphone.
 
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If you are afraid of your privacy being invaded, throw away your smartphone.
This, definitely 100% this!

Not sure about lower taxes but I second everything else said here.
 
There is no minority report
 
This will create a controversy. The AI can surely spot a shifty behaviour, like most people can, but those do not constitute a crime, they only call for extra vigilance, for which police is notorios for not following, they usually do not have time to attend actual crimes, never mind would-be crimes.

That idea in the Minority Report is very far-fetched. In reality, cities struggle to allocate money for police force these days, to deal with committed crimes, which makes it a pleasant fiction to think that a city would be financing some kind of crime-prevention unit.
 

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