Grandmother Claims She Was Wrongfully Jailed for Crime in Another State Due to Facial Recognition Software Error
A grandmother from Tennessee, Angela Lipps, claims she spent nearly six months behind bars after North Dakota police mistakenly identified her as a suspect in a bank fraud case using facial recognition software.
Sadly there was a human in the loop. A officer check the images and signed off on the warrant.
Can she sue their butt off?
I am quite sure she can. This granny is gonna be rich.
But it will be money stolen from taxpayers. The real crooks won't be paying.
The only ones that get rich are the lawyers.
Sad but true
I would love to see this.
If you follow the news back to the local news paper link you will find the local tv report
Thanks.
Good. AI should not ever replace basic police investigation. What a huge scam!
Wait! She is only 50? No way!! LOLOL
You know what Hertz no longer has?
Repeat customers.
What do you mean?
In this case Ai gets the wrong lady arrested.
At HERTZ they use AI to scan every detail of the car under bright lights and microscopes. People rent cars and get charged hundreds of dollars for scuff marks and such. Renting from HERTZ hurts too much; no one will make that mistake twice. Word is out. HERTZ HURTS!
AI being over trusted, not double checked or human verification. Just a lot of pain for every day people.
Trust me, AI HERTZ people! ;)
Good to know. I will not rent from them. I do rent vehicle when travel.
Hard to believe that police would rely entirely on facial recognition. There are only so many types of faces, and millions of people look very alike. If you look at this woman’s face, I’m sure it resembles other women you may know or have seen on the street. I have relatives in Kentucky who are second or third cousins, who look like clones of each other. Extended family resemblance is a real thing, even among families who have been generations living apart from their cousins.
LOL. Yes, true.
The movie "Minority Report" should come to mind
"NORTH Dakota"
;-)
Why North Dakota?
That's what was in the article, not South Dakota as was presented in the title/header of the posting
:-)
Oh. I got you. Thanks.
Sharp eyes.