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Search resuls for: "Evolv Technology"


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Mayor Eric Adams on Thursday announced that New York City planned to test technology to detect guns in its subway system as officials seek to make transit riders feel safe after a deadly shoving attack earlier in the week. The technology pilot, which would not begin for several months, would roll out in a few stations, Mr. Adams said at a news conference, and could help provide a sense of security among transit riders, who have been unnerved recently by several high-profile acts of violence. The new technology will be introduced in partnership with Evolv Technology, a Massachusetts start-up, Mr. Adams said. The city has no contract with Evolv, and the announcement was meant to be an open call to any firm with similar products, a city spokeswoman said, clarifying the mayor’s earlier comments.
Persons: Eric Adams, Adams Organizations: New, Evolv Technology, Evolv Locations: New York City, Massachusetts
An AI-powered weapons scanner meant to create "weapons-free zones," fails to detect knives. A New York school district bought the nearly $4 million system and then found out it didn't fully work. It spent close to $4 million to buy an AI-powered weapons scanner from Evolv Technology that the company bills as "proven artificial intelligence" able to create a "weapons-free zone." Evolv Technologies claims on its website that its weapons detection system can scan for weapons 10 times faster than traditional metal detectors. Evolv co-founder Anil Chitkara told WRAL, a news station in North Carolina, that the "AI algorithm is trained on thousands and thousands of different items, different weapons, different guns and also, different personal items, phones, keys, and other things."
Persons: , Brian Nolan, Evolv, Anil Chitkara, WRAL, Chitkara Organizations: New, Service, Evolv Technology, BBC, Teachers, Police, Utica Schools, Evolv Technologies Locations: New York, Utica, North Carolina, Evolv
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