Enrico Nardelli <narde...@mat.uniroma2.it> writes:

bellissimo grazie!!!

a fini archivistici aggiungo qualche estratto

> https://slate.com/technology/2022/11/police-beat-algorithm-lbj-ibm.html

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Excerpted from “You Are Not Expected to Understand This”: How 26 Lines
of Code Changed the World edited by Torie Bosch. Copyright © 2022 by
Princeton University Press. Reprinted by permission of Princeton
University Press.

In the early 1960s, the Black civil rights revolution raged in the
streets across the United States. This quest to build a more racially
just and equitable society happened right alongside the computer
revolution. Soon the two fused with the advent of the Police Beat
Algorithm, a software system to help police departments collect crime
data and determine where to focus crime-fighting efforts—and one that
that would end up deeply affecting our society from the 1960s up through
the present. Why did the Police Beat Algorithm come to exist? What
problems prompted the need for its formulation? Who developed it, and to
what ends?  The answers to each of these questions collectively tell a
story about how a little-known computational experiment laid the
cornerstone for what would become today’s surveillance
infrastructure—one that has deeply and negatively affected communities
of color across the globe.

[...] IBM’s focus on problem-solving also dictated its marketing
strategy. The company’s marketing representatives didn’t peddle
prepackaged products. Rather, they engaged leaders in every major
industry—from banking to transportation to the military—and simply
asked, “What problem do you have?”  Then, they promised to marshal IBM’s
research and development strength to build customized solutions for its
customers—solutions that could be broadly applied and widely scaled.

[...] For the President’s Crime Commission, White America’s vision of
the Watts uprisings put a face to the problem the president called on
them to solve—a problem that they felt required an extraordinary
remedy. They found great potential in the new computing technologies
that had already revolutionized war and national defense. Computing held
so much promise that in the spring of 1966, following the Watts
uprisings, Johnson added the Science and Technology Task Force to the
Commission to introduce new computational solutions to crime. The
president justified the task force’s work by pointing to computing
technology’s success in war, national defense, and space exploration:

[...] While the president and the Commission held great hope for the
solutions the Science and Technology Task Force would produce, they
placed their hopes more specifically in the one man whom they appointed
to lead it: Saul I. Gass.

Gass was a mathematician and operations research pioneer. In 1958 he
wrote the first textbook on linear programming—a mathematical modeling
technique that seeks to (in large part) influence human behavior by
quantifying and understanding the linear relationships between
variables.

[...] Gass signaled his agreement with the Johnson administration that
policing was the institution best equipped to solve America’s crime
problem—and therefore developed—the Police Beat Algorithm.

[...] The Police Beat Algorithm predominantly addressed four problems
associated with police operations: 1) pattern recognition, identifying
crime patterns within a set of crime data; 2) profiling, associating
crime patterns with probable suspects; 3) dragnetting, linking probable
suspects of one crime with past crimes or arrests; and 4) patrol
positioning, how to best place patrols within appropriate geographical
divisions of the city based on where the most crimes take place and
where known criminal suspect profiles predicted who will most likely
commit those crimes and where.

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-- 
380° (Giovanni Biscuolo public alter ego)

«Noi, incompetenti come siamo,
 non abbiamo alcun titolo per suggerire alcunché»

Disinformation flourishes because many people care deeply about injustice
but very few check the facts.  Ask me about <https://stallmansupport.org>.

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