From Newsgroup: alt.comp.os.windows-11
In article <112d6hh$ullg$
1@dont-email.me>,
ithinkiam@gmail.com says...
Being a chair representing the public for *25 years* sounds like you're >institutionalised and you're less a member of the public then a member of
the police. Your comment regarding signage being unnecessary points to
this.
My role is two-fold. Firstly (and foremost) I have to facilitate
questions and challenges from the local community to the police.
Secondly, given the widespread lack of understanding of how the police operates (something you've demonstrated above) it's also useful if I communicate what I've learned back into the community.
The relationship between the police (most police, most places) and
ethnic and other minorities is an unsolved problem. In London, Stop and Search (and yes, I've been stopped and searched) focuses particularly on
knife crime, and it's young black men who are overwhelmingly the most
likely victims of knife crime. Generations of black people have grown
up with a not-unreasonable distrust of the police, and reforms in the
police have happened a lot faster than changes in that distrust. An
Inspector told me that he has real trouble getting younger recruits to
carry out the stops that they need to be doing because they don't want
to be thought racist. Meanwhile young black men continue to be affected disproportinately by knife crime. Some believe that these people arm themselves because they don't trust the police to protect them - which
becomes a vicious circle.
I can't say whether there is any bias in the processes which lead to
someone's likeness being entered into a watchlist, but the Guardian
reported this:
"and it was ?statistically significantly more likely to correctly
identify black participants than participants from other ethnic groups?.
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/ng-interactive/2026/may/03/how- does-live-facial-recognition-work-and-how-many-uk-police-forces-use-it
If you'e so interested in what the police is doing, and you live in
London (presumably there are similar options in other UK regions) then
find out about your local ward panel (via the Met website). Go and ask
all the searching questions you like. You might learn something - and
you might also find your local team open to ideas.
For non-UK folk, the UK has a singular model of "policing by consent".
In the UK, the police are not agencies of government but an independent service expected to uphold the law. In London the Met is supervised by
the (London) Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime, led by a Deputy
Mayor with that portfolio title. The Commissioner is also accoountable
to the Home Secretary, but both are answerable to the courts. Police
officers are civilians in that they are non-military, overwhelmingly
unarmed, and the titles of ranks (other than Sergeant) were consciously
chosen to be non-military.
While there are inevitably "ripples" in crime, the overwhelming trend
over decades has been for crime of all kinds (except fraud) to decline
over time. If you doubt this, as any major AI research tool a relevant question.
Can we get back to Windows 11 now?
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Phil, London
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