Chicago won’t renew its ShotSpotter contract and plans to stop using the controversial gunshot detection system later this year, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office announced Tuesday.

The system, which relies on an artificial intelligence algorithm and network of microphones to identify gunshots, has been criticized for inaccuracy, racial bias and law enforcement misuse. An Associated Press investigation of the technology detailed how police and prosecutors used ShotSpotter data as evidence in charging a Chicago grandfather with murder before a judge dismissed the case due to insufficient evidence.

Chicago’s contract with SoundThinking, a public safety technology company that says its ShotSpotter tool is used in roughly 150 cities, expires Friday. The city plans to wind down use of ShotSpotter technology by late September, according to city officials. Since 2018, the city has spent $49 million on ShotSpotter.

  • xor@infosec.pub
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    1 year ago

    not if you consider fireworks, car misfires, echos and weird geometries, and the fact that supersonic bullets have a sonic boom that travels with it…

    that and the ai was probably only trained in black neighborhoods so it thinks loud bass or black accents are required to be a positive? i dunno

      • xor@infosec.pub
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        1 year ago

        i don’t think so… each neighborhood is shaped differently and will have an effect on the sound profiles…
        maybe if you set it up and calibrated it by shooting guns all around the city (:

      • phoneymouse@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        they have this in DC… coincidentally the day with the most “gunshots” is also the 4th of July when hoards of people are openly lighting off fireworks of all kinds in the street.