this post was submitted on 30 Apr 2025
10 points (100.0% liked)

The Verge

115 readers
65 users here now

News community for TheVerge. Will be deleted or retired once the Verge officially supports ActivityPub in their site.


This is an automated RSS-Feed community. If you dislike RSS Feed communities consider blocking it, or the bot.

founded 1 month ago
MODERATORS
 

NYPD officers patrol around Times Square Subway station on March 6 2024 The systems under development could alert the NYPD before any crime has been committed. | Photo by Eduardo MunozAlvarez / VIEWpress via Getty Images

New York’s Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it’s exploring the use of AI systems for “predictive prevention” of crime and dangerous behavior on the city’s subway platforms.

MTA chief security officer Michael Kemper said that the agency is “studying and piloting technology like AI to sense potential trouble or problematic behavior on our subway platforms.”

“If someone is acting out, irrational… it could potentially trigger an alert that would trigger a response from either security and/or the police department,” he explained during an MTA safety committee meeting Monday, emphasizing that the police response could come “before waiting for something to happen.”

“AI is the future,” he added, noting that the MTA is “working with tech companies literally right now” to investigate “what would work in the subway system.” Kemper didn’t detail which companies the MTA is working with, how AI will be implemented, or exactly what sort of behaviour the AI-enabled cameras will be expected to detect.

However, MTA spokesperson Aaron Donovan confirmed to Gothamist that the new system won’t rely on facial recognition. “The technology being explored by the MTA is designed to identify behaviors, not people,” Donovan said.

This isn’t the first time the MTA has implemented AI. In 2023 it disclosed that it was using AI-powered surveillance software to track fare evaders on the subway, monitoring when, where, and how most fare evasion takes place.


From The Verge via this RSS feed

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] letme_meowmeow 1 points 5 days ago

'total recall' in real life ?