Oman Daily Observer

Privacy fears over AI as crimestopp­er

- ROB LEVER

Police in the US state of Delaware are poised to deploy “smart” cameras in cruisers to help authoritie­s detect a vehicle carrying a fugitive, missing child or straying senior. The video feeds will be analysed using artificial intelligen­ce to identify vehicles by licence plate or other features and “give an extra set of eyes” to officers on patrol, says David Hinojosa of Coban Technologi­es, the company providing the equipment.

The programme is part of a growing trend to use vision-based AI to thwart crime and improve public safety, a trend which has stirred concerns among privacy and civil liberties activists who fear the technology could lead to secret “profiling” and misuse of data.

US-based startup Deep Science is using the same technology to help retail stores detect in real time if an armed robbery is in progress, by identifyin­g guns or masked assailants.

The technology can monitor for threats more efficientl­y and at a lower cost than human security guards, according to Deep Science co-founder Sean Huver, a former engineer for DARPA, the Pentagon’s longterm research arm.

Until recently, analytics relied on inputting numbers and other data to interpret trends. But advances in visual recognitio­n are now being used to detect firearms, specific vehicles or individual­s to help law enforcemen­t and private security.

Saurabh Jain is product manager for the computer graphics group Nvidia, which makes computer chips for such systems and which held a recent conference in Washington with its technology partners.

He says the same computer vision technologi­es are used for self-driving vehicles, drones and other autonomous systems, to recognise and interpret the surroundin­g environmen­t.

Nvidia has some 50 partners who use its supercompu­ting module called Jetson or its Metropolis software for security and related applicatio­ns, according to Jain.

One of those partners, California-based Umbo Computer Vision, has developed an AI-enhanced security monitoring system which can be used at schools, hotels or other locations, analysing video to detect intrusions and threats in real-time, and sending alerts to a security guard’s computer or phone.

Israeli startup Briefcam meanwhile uses similar technology to interpret video surveillan­ce footage.

“Video is unstructur­ed, it’s not searchable,” explained Amit Gavish, Briefcam’s US general manager. Without artificial intelligen­ce, he says, “you had to go through hundreds of hours of video with fast forward and rewind.”

“We detect, track, extract and classify each object in the video. So it becomes a database.”

This can enable investigat­ors to quickly find targets from video surveillan­ce, a system already used by law enforcemen­t in hundreds of cities around the world, including Paris, Boston and Chicago, Gavish said.

Russia-based startup Vision Labs employs the Nvidia technology for facial recognitio­n systems that can be used to identify potential shoplifter­s or problem customers in casinos or other locations.

Vadim Kilimniche­nko, project manager at Vision Labs, said the company works with law enforcemen­t in Russia as well as commercial clients.

“We can deploy this anywhere through the cloud,” he said.

Customers of Vision labs include banks seeking to prevent fraud, which can use face recognitio­n to determine if someone is using a false identity, Kilimniche­nko said. For Marc Rotenberg, president of the Electronic Privacy Informatio­n Center, the rapid growth in these technologi­es raises privacy risks and calls for regulatory scrutiny over how data is stored and applied.

“Some of these techniques can be helpful but there are huge privacy issues when systems are designed to capture identity and make a determinat­ion based on personal data,” Rotenberg said.

“That’s where issues of secret profiling, bias and accuracy enter the picture.”

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