Direct Answer Courts, prosecutors, and opposing counsel are deploying AI-powered risk scoring, predictive analytics, and algorithmic case…
The integration of artificial intelligence into policing and sentencing is not inherently problematic. What is problematic is how it is used.
If these systems are treated as tools that require verification, transparency, and accountability, they can be part of a broader effort to improve the justice system. If they are treated as authoritative outputs that do not need to be questioned, they introduce new risks.
Facial recognition systems operate by analyzing the geometric features of a face and comparing them against stored images in databases such as driver’s license records, mugshot repositories, or other government and commercial image collections.
The output is not a single identification. It is typically a ranked list of candidates based on similarity scores.
Direct Answer Police departments and prosecutors’ offices across the United States continue to define success through arrest…
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