This article identifies three uses of big data that hint at the future of policing and the questions these tools raise about conventional Fourth Amendment analysis. Two of these examples, predictive policing and mass surveillance systems, have already been adopted by a small number of police departments around the country. A third example—the potential use of DNA databank samples—presents an untapped source of big data analysis. Whether any of these three examples of big data policing attract more widespread adoption by the police is yet unknown, but it likely that the prospect of being able to analyze large amounts of information quickly and cheaply will prove to be attractive. While seemingly quite distinct, these three uses of big data s...
Increasingly, law enforcement agencies are using big data to fight crime. But outsiders often have n...
Intelligence-led policing, as a specific policing approach relying on information sharing and big da...
Introduction to Penn State Law Review\u27s Symposium on Big Data. This article disucsses the impact ...
Today’s availability of massive data sets, inexpensive data storage, and sophisticated analytical so...
The Fourth Amendment requires “reasonable suspicion” to seize a suspect. As a general matter, the su...
Rapid technological changes have led to an explosion in Big Data collection and analysis through com...
The future of policing will be driven by data. Crime, criminals, and patterns of criminal activity w...
The past decade has seen both the proliferation of surveillance in everyday life and the rise of “bi...
Computational procedures increasingly inform how we work, communicate, and make decisions, raising s...
In a high-tech command center in downtown Los Angeles, a digital map lights up with 911 calls, telev...
This paper investigates the relationship between predictive policing methods or so called “pre-crime...
As government agencies and law enforcement departments increasingly adopt big-data surveillance tech...
In a high-tech command center in downtown Los Angeles, a digital map lights up with 911 calls, telev...
By equipping police with data, what are we trying to accomplish? Certain answers ring familiar. For ...
This Article highlights some of the critical distinctions between small data surveillance and big da...
Increasingly, law enforcement agencies are using big data to fight crime. But outsiders often have n...
Intelligence-led policing, as a specific policing approach relying on information sharing and big da...
Introduction to Penn State Law Review\u27s Symposium on Big Data. This article disucsses the impact ...
Today’s availability of massive data sets, inexpensive data storage, and sophisticated analytical so...
The Fourth Amendment requires “reasonable suspicion” to seize a suspect. As a general matter, the su...
Rapid technological changes have led to an explosion in Big Data collection and analysis through com...
The future of policing will be driven by data. Crime, criminals, and patterns of criminal activity w...
The past decade has seen both the proliferation of surveillance in everyday life and the rise of “bi...
Computational procedures increasingly inform how we work, communicate, and make decisions, raising s...
In a high-tech command center in downtown Los Angeles, a digital map lights up with 911 calls, telev...
This paper investigates the relationship between predictive policing methods or so called “pre-crime...
As government agencies and law enforcement departments increasingly adopt big-data surveillance tech...
In a high-tech command center in downtown Los Angeles, a digital map lights up with 911 calls, telev...
By equipping police with data, what are we trying to accomplish? Certain answers ring familiar. For ...
This Article highlights some of the critical distinctions between small data surveillance and big da...
Increasingly, law enforcement agencies are using big data to fight crime. But outsiders often have n...
Intelligence-led policing, as a specific policing approach relying on information sharing and big da...
Introduction to Penn State Law Review\u27s Symposium on Big Data. This article disucsses the impact ...