Moving quickly. That’s the drumbeat of living in this post-everything, fast-moving, ever-changing world. Sometimes, it’s all just a blur, even in a city as mega-sized and kinetic as New York. That’s why, when you visit, you want to feel safe. You want no surprises. And that need is heightened in places like the Port Authority Bus Terminal, where 50,000 weary travellers stream through it every day. Until recently, security officials used slam-tube metal detectors and wand-style hand-held sensors to check people as they entered. This method was unobtrusive but also ineffective. Then, they added a better kind of metal detector. That improved things, but the rates of success remained pretty low. So, enter Evolv Technologies, a Massachusetts-based AI-driven gun detection company, in partnership with New York City’s new mayor Eric Adams, and suddenly it all changes. The promise of higher rates of success in finding guns, hands-free, seamless to casual onlookers, and all because data on the human body is fed into an AI program that continuously gauges the presence of a weapon based on 70 different factors in the body profile – all approaches recommended by the Department of Homeland Security for improved safety in busy sites. It’s very similar to how Disney recently used the technology, and now it’s the way the city is going to protect us as we forge boldly ahead into the big city. Or could. Safety innovation at the port of New York City.
Mayor Eric Adams’s decision last October to adopt Evolv’s artificial intelligence-enabled gun detection technology as a pillar of New York’s security infrastructure reflects both the degree to which this work – by a relatively small company – signals a major shift and how far into the mainstream digital defence of public life has already penetrated. No place will change more dramatically, and more visibly, than New York over the coming months. As early as this spring, Evolv systems will detect objects and people at dozens of city locations nationwide, including ‘surge hospitals’, schools and public transport hubs such as Times Square and the Port Authority Bus Terminal.
The city’s Port Authority Bus Terminal, a major hub for commuters and tourists alike, could be an obvious target for this type of AI security upgrade. Cutting-edge gun detection technology in such a dense, diverse crowd isn’t just a question of preventing harm, it’s also about offering a reassurance of safety to the millions of people who pass through its halls.
Disney’s implementation of Evolv’s system in its parks and at Disney Springs shows how, on a broader scale, AI technology for public safety can be practically applied, and why it can work better than more invasive checks for large numbers of people. While Disney had no public disasters or acts of violence at its gates on its mind, it’s possible that following its path would help New York City screen more people with less hassle, while maintaining uncompromised security at its ports of entry.
AI gun detection also raises questions about privacy and the handling of data. How will programmers balance the need for proper security with the right to privacy? We must set clear rules during this exploration and develop proper safeguards for individuals while still ensuring accuracy for the world.
The marriage between New York City and Evolv is potentially just a template for the security challenges of tomorrow. As AI evolves further still, its establishment in public safety measures could provide a route towards safer and more prepared cities – if we can steer clear of the potential pitfalls.
Here is where we should start to consider the real-world uses of AI gun detection – if it ever comes to this. Ports are not only infrastructure hubs. They have become such a key part of the US and global economy that, even today, the disruption of ports cripples the supply chain. They are also arteries that connect cities and countries to vital goods, people and investment.
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This term includes far more than its meaning at sea, as modern technology and safety discussions centre around prospects for ‘ports’ – physical or digital gateways and doorways over which people and datasets pass. For example, the AI gun detection at the PABT brings together all of these notions of what a port is, where ‘port’ reflects something that’s only just beginning; as metropolises grow, future ports will continue to serve as transit security incubators to move goods and people securely around our cities. In actuality, the mayor and Evolv partnership goes beyond securing a key transit hub – it makes a statement about compelling new future possibilities for urban safety, where technology and regular, humanising policy work in tandem, fostering urban possibilism and creating places where all people can prosper.
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