tv Documentary RT January 10, 2022 4:30am-5:00am EST
4:30 am
4:31 am
4:35 am
ah ah, what happened in ferguson the actual practice of how the demonstrations were handled? i think we're all embarrassed by quite frankly in line. so as i sat there, a guest watching it, i am, you know, the, the, the simplest issue of the use of tears in my book. if you fire tear guess you've got a riot. now you don't have to demonstration, so i don't know if there's a, i guess i have to be sensitive. when i say this, if there is a political gain in some communities for handling a different events and different fashions. danny brown's what i want to say i did 90 years in prison for murder. i didn't
4:36 am
commit and i'm still fighting. i've been out since 2001 when i got up to god in the one that would have arrived right up here. says nanny, for the last leach you. now we talk about the rat that they had and furth was shoe. when did cancer was started, all right? when they failed, they won. good. just you cannot keep treating people the same way you . you have to deal with ohio practice who you put in in, i'm uniformed because a badge is a powerful day is sometimes is like money. it played tricks. people mine. they think they got an answer through you know, example of thinking this rep members of the task force in the near future body cameras will be as commonplace in placing
4:37 am
a side arms handcuffs in portable radios. as a police chief, i always feel like i'm behind the curve when it comes to technology. today, we're talking about body cameras. tomorrow we'll be talking about something else. technology is moving at a pace where laws can't keep up with policies. can't keep up with a license plate readers. most departments have that. how long before facial recognition software is now applied. and as you're driving down the street, you scan in faces of people. just because you can do something doesn't necessarily mean you should do it. and we need to have these discussions up front if the technology can implicate people's civil rights. and it's something that we need to consider quite carefully before we simply fling it into the field. with the f b i deployed aircraft over fergus and last year in response to request from local
4:38 am
law enforcement. is that correct? yes, we've done it in baltimore. we did it in ferguson. as i recall, does the f. b, i respond to these types of requests frequently to the overwhelming use of our aircraft is a pilot flies as part of investigation to help us follow has spy a terrorist or a criminal. and sometimes the best view of that is a bond. i 20 years in the air force built a system called angel fire that allowed us to watch the entire town of fallujah for
4:39 am
2 years. we could watch the whole city see wherever one came from. i went to and that contributed significantly to the reduction in violence of the city. when i retired, i basically said, you know, this has a lot of applications. how do we make it affordable for a group, the size of like dayton, ohio. our imagery is processed on board to your craft made to look just like google earth down linked in about 3 to 5 seconds. and is available to be viewed by up to 50 people at once. literally could have the equivalent of a predator drone for every analyst on the ground. just not quite as high resolution . if you're at the scene of a crime, we draw a little circle around it. we figure out,
4:40 am
here's the people that are within that range that may or may not be involved in. it will track all of them and see what information we can find. we're really just rolling this out in a more public way. traditionally, we've worked with small groups. i know in a quiet secret of way because that's what our customers wanted. we been operating in different cities at different times, typically ones that are having significant crime problems. and some of the cities will see $30.00 to $40.00 crimes of mission and then it's a question of how many of them do we have time to investigate? and again, as a city, it's safer will actually be able to investigate lower and lower level primes.
4:41 am
this is an engineer version of an i law with the globe in the middle that are basically implies that you know, watching the whole world type of thing. we're not out to watch the whole world just all, all the world that's got crime. okay i what i am engaged in is forecasting what we call malfeasance, which is various kinds of behavior which may be legal but certainly undesirable. you get background information on individual from an archival dataset. and you push a button and you get a forecast. pretty good chance this is a low risk, personal, almost no chance they're gonna commit violent crime. and that may dismiss shoplifting or maybe some drug possession,
4:42 am
but chances either going to be fine. so here's another individual. bad guy. certain to be arrested for something. most likely a violent crime, but at least some other kind of crime. if somebody is really unique, this doesn't work. but we all think we're unique and we're not. so we have lots of commonalities and that on the average we can forecast pretty well. there are concerns about these take these and they're legitimate race the course of the most obvious one the obvious point as well. you really shouldn't be using somebody's race to forecast whether or not to commit a crime. well, it's a balance. if it were to turn out that race is an important factor,
4:43 am
let's say in predicting homicides and races associated with homicides, people generally kill people like themselves. maybe you do want to use race. if we don't use race, you're going to have an increase, perhaps in homicides you could have prevented how many deaths, 51015. are you prepared to allow? because she won't allow me to use race. ah. you know, everybody is concerned about bitcoin being a part of this game, but in fact, that's the only thing out there. there's not a party game, it's an open source project built by volunteers. it's not a policy, but there are a lot of policies out there. well,
4:44 am
and i make no no borders line nationalities and you farish as a merge we don't have with the we don't have a vaccine, whole world needs to take action and be ready. people are judge, you know. 2 common crisis with we can do better, we should be doing better. everyone is contributing each in their own way. but we also know that this crisis will not go on forever. the challenge is great, the response has been massive. so many good people are helping us. it makes us feel very proud that we are in it together with ah
4:45 am
ah, is your media a reflection of reality? in a world transformed what will make you feel safe? isolation for community. are you going the right way or are you being led somewhere? direct. what is true? what is great in the world corrupted. you need to descend. huh. so join us in the depths or remain in the shallows. ah
4:46 am
ah ah, he has been watching for sent of interest or watch that some secret computer says one man is develop that predicts crime before it happens. why not? now? why not predicts something? if you have all everything you need in the equation, i don't see why it couldn't be predicted at some point. so right now the car that you're in, we have a camera system and we also have a system where it's a facial recognition system license plate recognition system. it scans the streets and it can look at a license plate and tell, tell you if that car is warranted for
4:47 am
a crime and get it to do that here. or you know, so right there, it's all the license in different and it scans like that is that car right there. mm hm. and then also people on the street if they can get the face. clearly facial recognition, so person as a warrant, wanted that type of thing. and if your own public there's no expectation of privacy and that's a huge issue and people said, well, you can't just run my license plate for no reason. we yes we can. you just hope that everybody who runs them are running for the right reason mm
4:48 am
a we are a 247 operation providing support and information processing for the entire department . we also share our services to the entire region and the federal government were monitoring. for example, cameras. we have about 1000 cameras in the city, los angeles. additionally, we monitor all social media. we've got police officers who are going through all the social media looking for keywords to find out if there's any incidence occurring, any pro task for anything that may affect the city i don't think is gonna be a face for technology and policing. is the way i'll policing is going towards right
4:49 am
now. mm. a on this matter of forecasting criminal behavior. among our set of individuals who were considering to release from prison, we have darth vader's and luke skywalker sh. but we don't know which is which. anybody, anybody who has a hint of darth vader characteristics, we call them a darth vader. in contrast to call somebody a luke skywalker. that requires really compelling evidence. because when we want to be really, how do i say this and effective way? we really want to be sure that we catch all the dark theaters and we're prepared to
4:50 am
make some mistakes on this guy. luke skywalker. ah, we've done some work with families support services. in essence, we're collecting information on the parents. sometimes those parents have no criminal record whatsoever, but if we had information, for example, about their drug histories, but their educational circumstances about whether they're employed, psychiatric problems, all sorts of things. we might be able to forecast which kids are at risk before they're born. pretty neat. we could also forecast perhaps before they're born, whether high risk criminal homicide by the aged 18. i think that's all very doable
4:51 am
with the information that's out there. my problem is, what do you tell a mother? the child has not been born yet, and we say to her, your kid has a 5050 chance of committing homicide by the age of 18. i don't what you do with that. i don't know what she does with that. with all technology, we constantly are at these decision points where can be used for good or used from bad. this is just another example of that. it's a little more scary because it sorta sorta fundamentally goes to so much of the way we live in the way our society is
4:52 am
right now. drones are controlled one pilots bought. there's already technology in place which the robot make a decision with. and we now have drones that can fly information and they can talk to one another. and they can make decisions about whether to fire a hell fire missile or not. who makes that decision? the computer to make it more quickly and more accurately than you or i can. so maybe we should let them decide. well, let's now we're starting to move down the terminator route, right? we have robotic intelligence that can destroy human life when it thinks it's an appropriate thing to do. do you want to go there? i think it's inevitable because those sorts of more machines are going to be more effective, more powerful, more accurate than what we currently now have. i can't believe we're not going to go there. i don't know how as humans,
4:53 am
we're going to moderate the bad things that can fall from but it's inevitable. it's already sort of there. ah, in, in ever deal saying has got to get worse for his better voice. going to get worse folks. we are at war and you are the front line troops on this war folks, i want you to understand something. when they come to murder, the children, the individuals who tried to disarm our crops will be hunted down and across the nation, they will be attacked. they will be spit on,
4:54 am
they will be driven deep into their slimy little holes that never come out again. very near future dia trying to disarm our cops. folks are in nobody in mexico right now, complaining about militarization of bleach years and they're in nobody and russia complaining about militarization of police and the very near future you will be vindicated. a bad nose wolf is out the door very bad times are coming. good news, you have job security because the world desperately needs but you have to give a. ready ready we're ah . ready ready
4:57 am
4:58 am
foundation let it be in arms, race, movies on offense. very dramatic development only personally and getting to resist . i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very difficult time. time to sit down and talk july, an annual festival in st. petersburg, dedicated to dostoevsky. ah, the great right to think around psychologist, people often turn to his work to understand russia and russians, perhaps even themselves. if they put a single motor unit, she put they think about the matting vehicle while you finish changing a rita, transforming them as they read. that's a dust i ask is unique ability. the stay of ski wants to tell us, you can better yourself. he makes you face your true self or
4:59 am
5:00 am
a ah, headlining right now living there, pu, didn't, says russia won't allow the stabilization in neighboring catholics down, especially not an attempted revolution by foreign trained terrorists. live with them even the ugly. we are witnessing the aggression of international terrorism. where did they come from? these gangs of armed men who were trained abroad and clearly had experiencing fighting in global hotspots. this job was opposed shop, left aside from a few broken gadgets. broken windows looted, stalled burnt out, buildings the aftermath of the bottle protested with sweat through catholic stone. and while the president there says was a terrorist orchestrated to attempt locals tell out say about the impact it's
36 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
