Concerns about the use of AI "assistants" in the police
- Writer: info@mps-asia.com at
- Tech news
On August 26, US media reported that some police officers in this country began testing using artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot Draft One to create incident reports.
However, some prosecutors, police watchdogs and legal experts fear the risk that these chatbots could change the basic documentation in the criminal justice system, which is responsible for reviewing cases. case will be prosecuted or imprisoned.
Draft One is created from the same technology as the popular chatbot ChatGPT and is a product of famous technology company Axon.
This experimental "assistant" could create breakthroughs in some police activities. Many police appreciate the above chatbot because it helps save time entering data.
Axon founder and CEO Rick Smith affirmed that Draft One received the most positive reviews among all the products the company has introduced, but doubts cannot be avoided.
CEO Smith said prosecutors want to ensure that it is not the AI chatbot but the police officers who are responsible for preparing the report, because they may have to testify in court about the contents stated in the report.
AI is not a new technology for police agencies, as the industry has already applied algorithmic tools to read license plates, identify suspects, detect gunshots and predict where incidents might occur. crime case.
Many of those apps raise privacy and civil rights concerns, prompting lawmakers to seek to establish protections. However, the application of AI technology to write industry reports to produce police reports is still so new that there are no appropriate supervision regulations./.
(VNA/Vietnam+)