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Marketplace Tech

How police are experimenting with AI

Marketplace Tech

American Public Media

Technology, News

4.61.2K Ratings

🗓️ 10 December 2024

⏱️ 10 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The push to integrate artificial intelligence — like large language models — in the workplace is hitting almost every industry these days. And that includes policing. Reporter James O’Donnell with MIT Technology Review got an inside look at the ways in which many departments are experimenting with the new technology when he visited the annual International Association of Chiefs of Police conference back in October. O’Donnell attended to see how artificial intelligence was being discussed. He said police are using or thinking about AI in a wide range of applications. Marketplace’s Meghan McCarty Carino spoke with O’Donnell to learn more about those use cases.

Transcript

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When chatbots get into law enforcement.

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From American Public Media, this is Marketplace Tech.

1:02.1

I'm Megan McCarty Carino.

1:23.3

The push to integrate artificial intelligence like large language models in the workplace is hitting almost every industry these days, and that includes policing.

1:32.2

Reporter James O'Donnell with MIT Technology Review got an inside look at how many departments are experimenting with the new technology when he visited the annual International Association of Chiefs of Police Conference back in October.

1:39.3

The event, which bills itself as the largest gathering for police leaders in the U.S.

1:44.8

is not generally very open to the media.

1:48.6

But O'Donnell was able to attend for a day

1:51.2

to see how artificial intelligence was being discussed.

1:55.3

He said police are using AI in a wide range of applications,

1:59.5

such as AI-powered virtual reality training.

2:02.6

Rather than having instructors and actors come in and guide police departments through different

2:08.3

scenarios, which could range from de-escalating a situation out on the street all the way to

2:14.7

active shooter scenarios, the pitch is that VR can do that more realistically

...

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