All Stories from 2019
How to avoid a dystopian future of facial recognition in law enforcement
ReCode - December 10, 2019
Face Value: Why Marketing's Next Battleground is Your Face
AdAge - November 19, 2019
A New Model of Policing in Chicago
WBEZ Chicago Public Media - November 17, 2019
Charlotte Talks: Surveillance State Of Mind
WFAE Public Radio - November 11, 2019
Can Law Enforcement Be Both Tech-Driven and Just?
NYU News - November 1, 2019
Police will get AI-powered license plate readers, but ethical concerns remain
CNET - October 24, 2019
Axon, formerly Taser, plans to put automatic license plate readers on police dashboards
The Verge - October 23, 2019
Axon adds license plate recognition to police dash cams, but heeds ethics board’s concerns
TechCrunch - October 23, 2019
Axon Brings License Plate Recognition to Cops' Dash Cams
Gizmodo - October 23, 2019
Axon to add automatic license plate readers to police car systems
GeekWire - October 23, 2019
How to Re-imagine Policing with Front-End Accountability, featuring Barry Friedman
Pinpoint Podcast - September 12, 2019
Chicago gives ‘community policing’ another try
Crain's Chicago - August 28, 2019
Editorial: Words before weapons policy a fitting legacy for N.J. police chief
NJ.Com - August 27, 2019
Camden cops have new use of force policy that should be familiar to them
KYW Newsradio - August 26, 2019
Camden police launch strict ‘last resort’ use-of-force policy. Chief wants it to be national model.
NJ.Com - August 22, 2019
Camden County Police New Use-of-Force Guidelines Hailed as Blueprint for a National Model
NJ Pen - August 22, 2019
Camden County Police Department revises the use of force policy
ABC 6 Philadelphia - August 21, 2019
Camden County Police Department revises use of force guidelines
Cherry Hill Courier-Post - August 21, 2019
Camden County Police Release New Use Of Force Policies
CBS Philly - August 21, 2019
Revised Use Of Force Policy Unveiled By Camden County PD
Patch - August 21, 2019
The Washington Post - August 21, 2019
Global NewsWire - July 31, 2019
Who Will Hold the Police Accountable?
The Atlantic - July 25, 2019
The Washington Post - June 28, 2019
A Major Police Body Cam Company Just Banned Facial Recognition
The New York Times - June 27, 2019
Major Police Body Camera Manufacturer Rejects Facial Recognition Software
NPR News - June 27, 2019
Police Body Cam Company Says it Won't Use Facial Recognition (For Now)
Vice - June 27, 2019
No facial recognition in police body cams, their biggest maker vows
The Mercury News - June 27, 2019
Axon (formerly Taser) says facial recognition on police body cams is unethical
The Verge - June 27, 2019
Taser Company Axon Isn't Down With Cops Using Facial Recognition Technology Just Yet
Complex - June 27, 2019
A Major Police Body Camera Maker Hits Pause on Face Surveillance
Electronic Frontier Foundation - June 27, 2019
Behind The Body Camera: The Ethics, Adoption And Impact Of Recording Police Interactions
Connecticut Public Radio - June 27, 2019
America's Biggest Police Body-Cam Manufacturer Bans Face Recognition Surveillance—for Now
Gizmodo - June 27, 2019
Leading police bodycam manufacturer bans facial recognition technology
The Hill - June 27, 2019
Axon, the maker of police body cams, won’t pursue facial recognition as a business
Quartz - June 27, 2019
Tech Supplier Rejects Use of Facial Recognition in Police Body Cameras
Courthouse News Service - June 27, 2019
Police, activists comfort shooting victims' families
Austin Weekly News - May 14, 2019
After years of debate, police make major change in number of Nashville traffic stops
The Tennessean - April 17, 2019
LMPD's intensive traffic stops in West End are harassment and need to end
Courier Journal - April 11, 2019
Community policing pilot launches on West Side
Austin Weekly News - April 8, 2019
MuckRock - February 12, 2019
“Community policing is a philosophy, a belief that communities are safer when police and residents work together. In practice, it often means embedding officers in the community they serve so that they can get to know residents, open the lines of communication and develop trust. The hope is that community members will then be more likely to cooperate with officers and help provide information about crimes when they occur.”
WBEZ - Curious City - November 17, 2019