The movie entitled Minority Report predicted who would commit crimes and stopped them before they did it. The film was set in 2054. Welcome to 2054. Law enforcers in two States are using crime-prediction software to predict which freed prisoners are most likely to commit murder, and supervising them accordingly.
Instead of relying on parole officers to
decide how much supervision inmates will need to prevent future crimes, a new
system uses a computer algorithm to decide for them. The Minority Report-style
software is already being used in Baltimore and Philadelphia to predict future
murderers, and will be extended to Washington D.C. soon. It has been developed by Professor Richard
Berk, a criminologist at the University of Pennsylvania, who believes it will
reduce the murder rate and those of other crimes.
Prof. Berk says his algorithm could be used
to help set bail amounts and also decide sentences in the future. It
could also be modified to predict lesser crimes. He told ABC News that currently parole
officers are using their own judgment to decide what level of supervision each
parolee should have, based on their criminal record. His software replaces that 'ad-hoc' decision
making, and should identify eight future murderers out of 100.
Berk says:
"People assume that if someone murdered then they will murder in the future, but what really matters is what that person did as a young individual.
If they committed armed robbery at age 14, that's a good predictor.
If they committed the same crime at age 30, that doesn't predict very much."
Prof. Berk's researchers used the details
of more than 60,000 crimes then wrote an algorithm to find the people behind
the crimes who were more likely to commit murder when they were out of prison. Criteria including criminal record, type of
crime, location, and age at which the individual committed the crime were
analysed, with type of crime and age proving to be the most reliable predictors
of future crime. He said even his
students at the University of Pennsylvania compared his work to Minority
Report, the 2002 film starring Tom Cruise in which gifted humans called 'PreCogs'
can see into the future and predict who will commit crimes. Prof. Berk's work has been described as 'very
impressive' by Shawn Bushway, a professor of criminal justice at the State
University of New York at Albany. However
he cautioned that human rights campaigners might see that the extra supervision
mandated by the software for those deemed most likely to murder might amount to
harassment.
The government is slowly taking away all
our privacies. Even those who have
served their time are labelled future criminals based off of software. What will happen when the computers say YOU
are a future criminal? No longer are we free-will thinkers, we are only a
product of algorithms in a computer, waiting for us to make the wrong move. It
may be only a matter of time until we are all imprisoned.
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