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🍰 Happy Friday, everyone! Tomorrow is my daughter’s third birthday and I’m going to try to make angel food cake for the first time. Wish me luck.
The Minority Report, but in real life
The classic Philip K. Dick novella (and Tom Cruise action flick) just took a step closer to reality. This time, instead of using “precogs” to track down crime before it happens, we’re using computer algorithms.
This isn’t the first algorithm used by police to identify criminal hotspots, but it uses a new approach that’s intended to eliminate (or at least identify) biases in policing.
- The report was published in the Nature journal under the title “Event-level prediction of urban crime reveals a signature of enforcement bias in US cities” (via Bloomberg).
- It breaks urban areas into 1000 square-foot-tiles, then uses historical crime data to predict where crime is most likely to occur.
- Using Chicago as a test, it was able to predict criminal activity with 90% accuracy, with similar results in other major US cities.
A different approach:
- This differs from previous models, which worked from the assumption that criminal activity originated from fixed hotspots and spread from there.
- Social scientists at the University of Chicago argue that this approach ignores the “complex social environment of cities, as well as the nuanced relationship between crime and the effects of police enforcement.”
- Instead of directly policing these hotspots, the new algorithm pulls from “hundreds of thousands of sociological patterns” to predict increases in crime in certain areas a week in advance.
Limits of predictive policing:
- Minority Report’s mutant precogs make mistakes, and these types of algorithms are no different.
- In the past, they’ve had a notoriously low hit rate (paywall), and often lead to even worse biases in policing low-income areas and individuals.
- Will this one be any better, or is predictive policing best left to the realm of science fiction?
- My vote is for the latter.
Roundup
📺 Google TV could soon take the pain out of setting up streaming apps with automatic app installs and logins (Android Authority).
📉 Data shows that peak smartphone sales may be behind us for good (Android Authority).
📱 But maybe one man can turn that around? Our polling indicates that the vast majority of our readers think Carl Pei and Nothing have a real chance at success (Android Authority).
🤏 Samsung is the first company to start producing 3nm chips, which are faster, less power-hungry, and more thermally efficient (Android Authority).
⌚ Excited about the Galaxy Watch 5? New leaks provide a glimpse of Wear OS 3.5 and One UI Watch 4.5, which hint at new features to come (Android Authority).
🔐 Google’s Password Manager got a major usability update, unifying the experience across devices (Android Authority).
💰 Former Apple lawyer in charge of enforcing insider trading rules at the company pleads guilty to insider trading. Who could have predicted? (Reuters).
👮 Police used a reverse keyword Google search to find an accused killer. He says that’s illegal. (NBCNews).
🌫️ The US Supreme Court continues to put out controversial rulings. Here’s how carbon emissions got caught up in the political battle and what it all means (Ars Technica).
🤖 Speaking of regulations, the FCC says it closed a loophole that many robocallers used to evade blocking (Ars Technica).
💰 Bad news continues for crypto-fans, as Bitcoin posts its worst quarter in more than a decade (CNBC).
🎮 Fire Emblem Heroes is Nintendo’s first mobile game to hit $1 billion in revenue. And the second isn’t even close. (Gamespot).
🤔 You may not be alone: What’s a weird thing you think only you do? (r/askreddit).
Friday Fun
Ever since the Avengers Infinity War/Endgame saga came out a few years ago, Marvel fans have speculated that Ant-Man could have instantly defeated Thanos by shrinking down, entering his… uh… behind, and expanding while inside him. While the writers of Endgame addressed this back in 2020 (as did The Boys in season 3 episode 1), Disney has finally officially addressed it in a short film that plays at the Worlds of Marvel restaurant.
Granted, it’s just a short blurb at the start of a 13-minute video, but it’s still a fun shout-out to one of the most ridiculous fan theories in (recent) Marvel history.
Until next week,
Nick Fernandez, Editor.