Predictive policing and ghetto avoiding
Logan Koepke has written .Ìý Predictive policing involves the use of computer algorithms to assign police coverage to a given region on the basis of anticipated risk of crime.Ìý
Logan Koepke has written .Ìý Predictive policing involves the use of computer algorithms to assign police coverage to a given region on the basis of anticipated risk of crime.Ìý
One of the promises driving support for Donald Trump in the recent U.S. election was his promise to bring back manufacturing work.Ìý Many Americans have seen their industrial jobs disappear without much prospect of return.Ìý They and Trump blame globalization for moving these jobs overseas.Ìý Thus, changes in trade policy are touted to bring them back.
by three UÀ¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ professors is set to take place that would be of interest to readers of this blog.Ìý The speakers and topics are as follows:
Aimée Morrison(·¡²Ô²µ±ô¾±²õ³ó)Ìý
Loneliness and social media: What does it mean, and not mean, to have ‘Friends’ online?
One theme raised in our STV 202 class is that acquisition of information may precede practical knowledge of what to do with that information.Ìý This issue is especially noticeable in health, where it has become very easy to track people's vital statistics but not so easy to know how to use the results to benefit them.
Think of any commercial fitness tracker you can name.
An interesting article by Alice Hopton on CBC news discusses .
The article describes Yondr, a small pouch in which smartphones may be locked during concerts, classes, and other social gatherings.Ìý Yondr's inventor, Graham Dugoni, argues that some people's habit of recording concerts, rather than just experiencing them unfiltered, undermines the point of such events, which is:
As Scott recently point out, the recent U.S. election has been characterized by a deluge of fake news.Ìý A concern about this phenomenon is that it distracts from the real news and entrenches readers in their prejudices through .Ìý
As we contemplate the fallout of the election of Donald Trump as U.S. President, it is interesting to consider the rising influence of social media in modern politics.Ìý
William Gibson, the Canadian science-fiction writer, :
The future is already here — it's just not very evenly distributed.
Andy Greenberg at Wired points out an interesting project by one Julian Oliver: .Ìý You may have heard of the , a device used by police (among others) that intercepts cell phone traffic by spoofing a legitimate cell phone tower.Ìý Well, Mr.
According to a , the US election season has produced a bumper crop of fake news. Of course, people have been making stuff up and passing it off as genuine probably forever. But the BBC seems to be focused on two tech-related factors: social media and advertising, and less on the non-tech-related one: satire.