Future breaking technology (2)

Technology to support the task force is also going further with CCTV system to detect suspects in the crowd, software scouring criminals.

>>>Technology to break the future

CCTV "smells" the smell of crime

Electronics firm Hitachi is building a smart CCTV camera system , which can identify anyone who is within its observation circle, while Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) studies sensitive cameras so that it can be checked. Check out the pulse of those who pass. MIT devices can also be used to track suspects awaiting interrogation, and accompanying software (EVM) allows to see all the slightest movements of the eye muscles, or gesture of manifestation. project of a suspect. This software is designed to continuously monitor the variation of pixels on the frame and thereby amplify the changes. When the heart pumps blood throughout the body, the arteries bulge under the flow of the blood, causing a slight change in the beat. Under the camera's ability to observe the wall, the object's heart rate is completely exposed. Not only that, the software can be installed for mobile devices such as smartphones or Google glasses, allowing users to see the heartbeat of people around them in fact.

Picture 1 of Future breaking technology (2)
Software detects the smallest movements on the eye muscles and other abnormal signs - (Photo: Hitachi)

Hats detect lies

Veritas Scientific is making a thinking hat , capable of knowing whether a person is telling the truth or lying, or whether the person has committed a crime. This device is fitted with many sensors that monitor brain activity through electrocardiograms (EEG). Based on the data collected at millions of points of the brain, the "friend or foe" algorithm identifies models that can distinguish 'friend' or 'enemy' almost immediately. It works by projecting images at the crime scene in front of the person wearing the hat, then looking for small changes in brain activity to determine the person's reaction. Veritas said the first customer would be the US military, which could then be used in law enforcement, criminal trial and corporate mergers. Excluding the possibility that the technology could be turned into a smart phone application, allowing anyone to own a pocket lie detector.

Software sees through all secrets

Palantir is holding the promising software that will upset the way governments, law enforcement agencies and even banks are. Founded by a former PayPal executive, Alex Karp, worth up to $ 8 billion, the Silicon Valley-based technology firm owns enviable customer names, including NSA, FBI and CIA. . Palantir's secret lies in its ability to quickly exploit massive amounts of information to make connections that people or other software can ignore. Next, it can provide a variety of charts, images and other data to assist people in locating the smallest trends or links.

Currently the company's software has been used for anti-terrorism, pre-disaster response and human trafficking. Specifically, the Marines deployed software designed specifically to analyze roadside bombs and predict the attacks of insurgents in Afghanistan. In the United States, the software helped authorities find Mexican drug smugglers murdering a US customs officer, according to Forbes. Even some good sources of information said it was a tool to help Osama bin Laden's terrorist stay in Pakistan.