police

Latest

  • georgeclerk via Getty Images

    Data breach compromises info for 20,000 LAPD officers and applicants

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.29.2019

    Los Angeles police officers are the victims of what appears to be a serious data breach. The city's Personnel Department has warned the LAPD that intruders stole personal information for roughly 2,500 officers and 17,500 officer applicants, including names, dates of birth, partial employee serial numbers and login details for the applicants. More info may have been taken, an official told NBC Los Angeles.

  • Stephen Brashear/Getty Images

    Amazon asks police to advertise Ring cameras as part of partnerships

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.25.2019

    Amazon's fondness for surveillance camera technology apparently includes programs that ask homeowners to volunteer their own cameras. Motherboard has learned that Amazon has partnerships with US police departments that have law enforcement agencies advertising Ring cameras in return for free giveaway units and an anonymized portal where they can request footage directly from homes. While it's not as clandestine as it appears (more on this in a bit), there are worries the two sides are working too closely and encouraging locals to compromise their privacy.

  • Chris Velazco/Engadget

    A sheriff's office in Colorado is using Galaxy S9s as body cameras

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    07.18.2019

    Deputies in the Kit Carson County Sheriff's Office in Burlington, Colorado, are wearing Samsung Galaxy S9 smartphones on their vests. The phones serve as body cameras and run on AT&T's LTE-based FirstNet public safety platform. In addition to recording footage, they serve as personnel locators, digital cameras and secondary radios.

  • Justin Sullivan via Getty Images

    Oakland bans city use of facial recognition software

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    07.17.2019

    Oakland, Calif. is now the third US city to ban the use of facial recognition technology. The city passed an ordinance yesterday that prohibits the use of the technology on the grounds that it is often inaccurate, potentially invasive and lacks standards. "Face recognition technology runs the risk of making Oakland residents less safe as the misidentification of individuals could lead to the misuse of force, false incarceration, and minority-based persecution," Council President Rebecca Kaplan wrote in a letter recommending the ban.

  • AP Photo/Denis Poroy

    FBI and ICE use DMV photos as 'gold mine' for facial recognition data

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.07.2019

    Cities and companies might be turning away from facial recognition, but federal agents are embracing it -- whether or not the public is fully aware of what's happening. Georgetown Law researchers and the Washington Post have discovered that FBI and ICE investigators have been using state DMVs as a "gold mine" for facial recognition data, scanning hundreds of millions of photos to create an unofficial surveillance infrastructure. Officers routinely use the info to help track down suspects in "low-level" crimes like petty theft, and they use it frequently -- the FBI by itself conducts 4,000 facial recognition searches per month.

  • izusek via Getty Images

    UK police's facial recognition system has an 81 percent error rate

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    07.04.2019

    Facial recognition technology is mistakenly targeting four out of five innocent people as wanted suspects, according to findings from the University of Essex. The report -- which was commissioned by Scotland Yard -- found that the technology used by the UK's Metropolitan Police is 81 percent inaccurate and concludes that it is "highly possible" the system would be found unlawful if challenged in court.

  • Axon

    Axon won’t use facial recognition tech in its police body cameras

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    06.27.2019

    Axon, a major supplier of police body cameras and software, announced today that it will not include face-matching technology in its body cameras -- at least not yet. The decision follows a report from Axon's independent AI ethics board, which concluded that face recognition technology is not reliable enough to justify its use in body cameras. According to the report, there is "evidence of unequal and unreliable performance across races, ethnicities, genders and other identity groups."

  • Regis Duvignau / Reuters

    Google Maps speed limits and radar locations arrive in 40 countries

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    05.30.2019

    After running limited tests in the US and elsewhere, Google Maps is rolling out speed limit warnings and both fixed and mobile radar locations in over 40 countries, Google has confirmed to TechCrunch. The features are borrowed from Google-owned Waze and will appear in the iOS and Android Maps. The speed limit signs are located in the bottom corner of Maps and the radar and photo radar traps appear as icons on the virtual roads.

  • Niall Carson - PA Images via Getty Images

    California's Senate may ban facial recognition tech in police body cameras

    by 
    AJ Dellinger
    AJ Dellinger
    05.21.2019

    The state of California's legislature is considering a new bill that would ban the use of facial recognition technology in police body cameras, according to CNBC. The proposal, which has already passed the state Assembly and now awaits a vote from the Senate, would follow in the footsteps of the city of San Francisco, which took action to forbid government agencies from adopting facial recognition software earlier this month.

  • Matt McClain/The Washington Post via Getty Images

    Botched update crashes hundreds of Netherlands police ankle monitors

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    05.12.2019

    Mangled software updates are a headache for everyday users, but they created serious trouble for Dutch law enforcement in recent days. Officials have revealed that a software update created a "disruption" for hundreds of ankle monitors used to track bail releases and house arrests, leaving police without a way to locate suspects and criminals. The issue was fixed hours after it began on May 9th, but it lasted long enough that officers had to check in with wearers and even preemptively arrest some of them to ensure they stayed put.

  • ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Amazon shareholders will vote to ban facial recognition tech

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    04.15.2019

    Amazon shareholders will vote to ban the company's controversial facial recognition technology next week in a key symbolic process. Amazon set the vote date, May 22nd, after the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rejected the company's request to have the motion squashed. A group of shareholders, led by nonprofit Open MIC, asked Amazon's board to stop selling the deep learning tools until a third party can confirm "it does not cause or contribute to actual or potential violations of human rights."

  • Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Google faces surge in police requests for mobile location data

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    04.14.2019

    It's clearer than ever that police see smartphones as treasure troves of evidence. New York Times sources understand that law enforcement requests for information from Google's mobile Location History database, known internally as Sensorvault, have "risen sharply" in the last six months. While the exact volume isn't apparent, there have been "as many as 180 requests" in a single week. In some cases, the demands are particularly broad and may scoop up data from "hundreds" of phones, albeit with limits.

  • Hong Xing/China Daily via Reuters

    China says it cloned a police dog to speed up training

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    03.24.2019

    It can be costly and time-consuming to train police dogs when each candidate might have different skills and personalities. China's solution? Make copies of the best-performing dogs. The state-backed China Daily reports that the city of Kunming, the Yunnan Agricultural University and Beijing Sinogene Biotechnology are about to train Kunxun, a two-month-old Kunming wolfdog cloned from a "great" canine detective. The aim, as you might guess, is to save time and money -- they'll know that Kunxun is more likely to learn quickly and perform well.

  • California Highway Patrol Golden Gate Division Air Operations, Facebook

    Police ended a gas station standoff by using a robot to deliver a vape pen

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    01.14.2019

    A six-hour stand-off between police and a 40-year-old man threatening to set alight a convenience store was brought to a peaceful end by a robot carrying a vape pen. Local media reports described a tense situation on Saturday morning in Novato, California that led to the closure of a Safeway store and McDonald's amid fears that the suspect may have been armed. The incident was caught on tape, including the moment the robot handed the man (identified by police as Juan Roman) a smartphone for communications.

  • AP Photo/Seth Wenig

    NYPD will deploy a drone at Times Square on New Year's Eve

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    12.30.2018

    Security at Times Square tends to be extra-tight on New Year's Eve, but it's now poised to have some robotic support. The NYPD is deploying one of its new camera-toting drones at the event for the first time, giving it an aerial surveillance tool that's decidedly closer to the action than a conventional aircraft or helicopter. The machine will not only watch for trouble in the crowd, but wield "counter-drone technology" to keep potentially hostile vehicles at bay.

  • ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Police are using fake Amazon boxes with GPS to catch thieves

    by 
    AJ Dellinger
    AJ Dellinger
    12.12.2018

    'Tis the season for tons of Amazon packages arriving at your doorstep, but nothing puts a damper on the holidays like having one stolen. Police in Jersey City have been setting up fake Amazon boxes on doorsteps in order to catch thieves, according to the Associated Press. Law enforcement has installed doorbell cameras at homes where the sting operations are set up and rigged the packages with GPS tracking devices to catch the criminals.

  • NYPD

    NYPD police officers will start using drones

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    12.04.2018

    The New York Police Department announced today that it has launched a new drone program. The department says it will use its collection of drones -- 14 in all -- for search and rescue missions, crime scene documentation, hazmat incidents, large events like concerts and hostage situations. "As the largest municipal police department in the United States, the NYPD must always be willing to leverage the benefits of new and always-improving technology," Police Commissioner James O'Neill said in a statement. "Our new [Unmanned Aircraft System] program is part of this evolution -- it enables our highly-trained cops to be even more responsive to the people we serve, and to carry out the NYPD's critical work in ways that are more effective, efficient and safe for everyone."

  • AP Photo/Mary Altaffer

    NYPD pulls 2,990 body cameras after one catches fire

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    10.21.2018

    The NYPD's plan to outfit every officer with body cameras has run into trouble. The department has pulled about 2,990 Vievu LE-5 cameras across the city after one officer's camera caught fire near a Staten Island precinct. There's a "possible product defect" with the LE-5, the NYPD said in a statement, and it was removing existing models out of an "abundance of caution." Most of the force's 15,500 cameras (including LE-4 models) aren't affected.

  • Chris Velazco/Engadget

    Police told to avoid looking at recent iPhones to avoid lockouts

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    10.13.2018

    Police have yet to completely wrap their heads around modern iPhones like the X and XS, and that's clearer than ever thanks to a leak. Motherboard has obtained a presentation slide from forensics company Elcomsoft telling law enforcement to avoid looking at iPhones with Face ID. If they gaze at it too many times (five), the company said, they risk being locked out much like Apple's Craig Federighi was during the iPhone X launch event. They'd then have to enter a passcode that they likely can't obtain under the US Constitution's Fifth Amendment, which protects suspects from having to provide self-incriminating testimony.

  • SIPA USA/PA Images

    Seattle PD registry opens for residents worried about 'swatting'

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    10.02.2018

    The practice of 'swatting' has increasingly become a part of online harassment, and now the Seattle Police Department formalized a proactive measure for residents who think they might be a target. It published a PSA for the project showing bodycam footage of officers responding to a call that turned out to be a swatting "prank" where a caller claimed he was holding five hostages and would kill them if he didn't get $5,000. When police rushed to the location, they found only a young woman and a cat. For people like live streamers who may be targets, the PD is using its arrangement with a company called Rave Facility. It already used their tech to create a "Smart 911" profile residents could fill out to give responders a heads up about being hearing impaired, having pets or a medical condition to be concerned about. This next step contains a flag for registering swatting concerns about a particular location.