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In 2019, Utah struck a deal with Banjo, a threat detection firm selling AI services to process live traffic feeds, dispatch logs, and other data. Banjo claimed to use software that automatically detected anomalies to help law enforcement solve crimes and respond faster. Is there too much hype about AI or too much doomsaying?
One thing the federal government did do was promote public-private partnerships to increase testing capacity, and that effort also stumbled as this piece about a Utah initiative by Robert P. Tech companies are calling for a nationwide law to govern facial recognition technology. Baird lays out.). So what is working?
antitrust law,” Yale University economics professor Fiona Scott Morton, the chief economist in the Justice Department’s antitrust division from 2011-2012, wrote in a new academic paper entitled “Roadmap for a Digital Advertising Monopolization Case Against Google.”. Utah spent $2.75 Karen Weise / The New York Times ).
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