(no title)
ibudiallo | 4 years ago
"Where we're you that evening? do you own a outfit matching the suspect? Etc." This kid would have been quickly cleared. It's already terrifying to be questioned by the police when you are innocent. How do you think he felt when they said they had video evidence of him shoplifting. They already made up their mind.
Now replace your colleagues with an AI. Simply because you have a match does not mean you have the suspect. Just over a year ago we were discussing the same issue: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23628394
NickNameNick|4 years ago
They had a system of levels of confidence they would use in their reports when identifying someone.
The highest level of confidence was achieved when a close friend or family member identified the person in the picture of video.
There were progressively lesser levels of confidence for people less close to the purported subject of the image.
They also had a system of points of similarity/difference. but they normally only used that to establish that the same subject had been observed by multiple cameras, rather than to establish the identity of the subject.
tolbish|4 years ago
That depends on if the goal of those using the technology is arriving at the truth or if the goal is naming a suspect who you can reliably stick a guilty verdict on.
sneak|4 years ago
You overestimate the initiative and competence of the police.