Sunday, May 24, 2020


Are we doing as well as China?
The Use of Facial Recognition Technology by the United States and China, and How It Affects Civil Liberties
The purpose of this research was to compare the use of facial recognition technology on civil liberties between the United States and China. An analysis of the accuracy levels of facial recognition algorithms is examined as well as how and why it leads to racial bias in the United States. Americans are granted safeguards against unreasonable search and seizures and a reasonable amount of privacy in public. However, legislators have not yet introduced the legal framework to accord citizens those rights under this new technology.




Is “The Minority Report” inevitable?
Erasing the Bias Against Using Artificial Intelligence to Predict Future Criminality: Algorithms are Color Blind and Never Tire
Many problems in the criminal justice system would be solved if we could accurately determine which offenders would commit offenses in the future. The likelihood that a person will commit a crime in the future is the single most important consideration that influences sentencing outcomes. It is relevant to the objectives of community protection, specific deterrence, and rehabilitation. The risk of future offending is also a cardinal consideration in bail and probation decisions. Empirical evidence establishes that judges are poor predictors of future offending—their decisions are barely more accurate than the toss of a coin. This undermines the efficacy and integrity of the criminal justice system.




Consider using this tool to predict the benefits/problems of proposed laws.
Predicting Judicial Outcomes in the Brazilian Legal System Using Textual Features
The combination of Natural Language Processing and Artificial Intelligence for the field of Law is a growing area, with the potential of radically changing the daily routine of legal professionals. The amount of text generated by those professionals is outstanding, and to this point, still unexplored by Computer Science. One of the most acclaimed research field covering both knowledge areas is Legal Prediction, in which intelligent systems try to predict specific judicial characteristics, such as the judicial outcome or the judicial class or a given case. This research intends to create a classifier to predict judicial outcomes in the Brazilian legal system. At first, we developed a text crawler to retrieve judicial outcomes from the official Brazilian electronic legal systems. Afterward, a few judicial subjects were selected, and some of their features were extracted. Later, a set of different classifiers was applied to predict the legal considering these textual features.




Creating the mythical(?) ethical lawyer.
The Ethical AI Lawyer: What is Required of Lawyers When They Use Automated Systems?
Artificial intelligence (AI) is profoundly changing the field in which lawyers work, one that has already undergone enormous change. It is also predicted that, as in other professional domains, AI will come to exceed the performance of practitioners[1] and potentially replace them altogether. In legal services, AI may be used to create automated advice platforms, generate drafts and undertake review of documents for discovery and due diligence—perhaps foreshadowing a ‘complete overhaul’ in how these services are provided.[2] Speculation about AI’s further potential to automate elements of legal practice has ramped up in recent years,[3] as even wider applications, such as ‘predicting’ the outcomes of cases, continue to be investigated. At the same time, it is claimed that AI will make lawyers’ practice more interesting through automation of ‘grunt work’, and further offer greater commercial opportunities in new legal problems it raises.[4] Legal AI may be marketed or purposed for consumer (or client) application without need for a lawyer intermediary, but many products are intended for use by lawyers and their organisations.[5]




As a huge SciFi fan I have to ask: Did I become mentally resilient as a youth or am I
Sci-Fi and Fantasy Build Mental Resiliency in Young Readers
Young people who are “hooked” on watching fantasy or reading science fiction may be on to something. Contrary to a common misperception that reading this genre is an unworthy practice, reading science fiction and fantasy may help young people cope, especially with the stress and anxiety of living through the COVID-19 pandemic.
While many people may not consider science fiction, fantasy or speculative fiction to be “literary,” research shows that all fiction can generate critical thinking skills and emotional intelligence for young readers. Science fiction may have a power all its own.
Historically, those who read science fiction have been stigmatized as geeks who can’t cope with reality. This perception persists, particularly for those who are unaware of the changes to this genre in the past several decades. A 2016 article in Social and Personality Psychology Compass, a scholarly journal, argues that “connecting to story worlds involves a process of ‘dual empathy,‘ simultaneously engaging in intense personal processing of challenging issues, while ‘feeling through’ characters, both of which produce benefits.”
While science fiction has become more mainstream, one study claimed that science fiction makes readers stupid. A subsequent study by the same authors later refuted this claim when the quality of writing was taken into account.




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1 comment:

Greg Prosmushkin said...

Thanks for taking the time to share this informative information with us. I found your blog recently and hope to read more from you in the future. Have a wonderful rest of your day and keep up the posts.
Greg Prosmushkin