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 parole officer


'They track every move': how US parole apps created digital prisoners

The Guardian

In 2018, William Frederick Keck III pleaded guilty in a court in Manassas, Virginia, to possession with intent to distribute cannabis. He served three months in prison, then began a three-year probation. He was required to wear a GPS ankle monitor before his trial and then to report for random drug tests after his release. Eventually, the state reduced his level of monitoring to scheduled meetings with his parole officer. Finally, after continued good behaviour, Keck's parole officer moved him to Virginia's lowest level of monitoring: an app on his smartphone.


UAH to create app for parolees, officers using artificial intelligence technology

#artificialintelligence

One key to solving Alabama's prison crisis could lie in artificial intelligence. The University of Alabama in Huntsville is leading the charge. The artificial intelligence technology would be used through an app. Parolees would be required to download it, and it would give resources to the parolee and parole officer. The man behind this idea believes it is his way of serving a community he has once dealt with.


The Crime You Have Not Yet Committed

#artificialintelligence

Computers are getting pretty good at predicting the future. In many cases they do it better than people. That's why Amazon uses them to figure out what you're likely to buy, how Netflix knows what you might want to watch, the way meteorologists come up with accurate 10-day forecasts. Now a team of scientists has demonstrated that a computer can outperform human judges in predicting who will commit a violent crime. In a paper published last month, they described how they built a system that started with people already arrested for domestic violence, then figured out which of them would be most likely to commit the same crime again.