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Microsoft and the NYPD team up on policing supercomputer

by Mark Tyson on 10 August 2012, 12:00

Tags: Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT)

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Microsoft has been helping the New York Police Department (NYPD) build a Domain Awareness System (DAS) to help fight terrorism and solve crimes. DAS takes live CCTV, radiation detectors, license plate readers, live incident and police reports and ties them all together in a graphical computer display so that law enforcers can track criminals and their activities more intuitively.

No longer stovepiped

In a report today in the New York Daily News the new DAS system was revealed to have cost between $30 million and $40 million to develop. The New York mayor Michael Bloomberg boasted about how advanced the new DAS system is; “We’re not your mom and pop police department anymore. We are in the next century. We are leading the pack.” Not a very technical explanation but probably good enough for voters. The NYPD Police Commissioner offered a better insight as to the benefits of the new DAS system; “For years, we’ve been stovepiped as far as databases are concerned. Now, everything that we have about an incident, an event, an individual comes together on that workbench, so it’s one-stop shopping for investigators.” said NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly.

30 per cent cash back!

In a canny move by the New York mayor/NYPD “the city will receive 30 per cent of all revenues from Microsoft sales of the Domain Awareness System” Mayor Bloomberg said. He added that the investment in DAS makes the city safer and will also pay for itself in royalties and even “maybe make a few bucks”.

Dirty bomb

The Wall Street Journal has some more background information upon how the DAS was created. Joel Schectman at the WSJ says the DAS system is an amalgamation of other Microsoft software technologies “such as SharePoint  and the mapping software Virtual Earth”. Further that “In DAS, the tools allow police to immediately access thousands of cameras, while cross-checking criminal records and mapped patterns of past crimes. The tools also send alerts from “dirty bomb” detection tools stationed at high traffic areas, and allow officers to instantly view license plate numbers that were captured by cameras.” NYPD police know-how helped enhance and refine these software tools to be fit for the purpose of crime prevention and law enforcement.



HEXUS Forums :: 4 Comments

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Hackers must be excited. Soon all the needed access be granted so peoples identity can be wiped clean - just like in the movie :)
If any of these guys did some research (although I suspect a few may actually know this), they'd know that the ‘Dirty Bomb’ is a total myth. You just can't spread nuclear matter effectively that way.

I wish advances in monitoring or military equipment would stop using terrorism as an excuse.
edvinasm
Hackers must be excited. Soon all the needed access be granted so peoples identity can be wiped clean - just like in the movie :)

I was a lead programmer on a similar project back in the days, working for a gov't subcontractor, and its production name would roughly translate into English as “Danger Assessment System” or “DAS” for short (Just like this one LOL). A system like that would be, in layman's terms, “read-only” with data entry points distributed over intranet just like before deployment. In other words, it shouldn't increase risks of being hacked if designed properly as the network and all its parts remain much the same. What it roughly does is provides indexing and analytical (reporting) tools on “live” spatial data layers and their accompanying meta-data using various cross-section type queries, event tracking, and similar. It's, in its very essence, resource and computationally intense data reporting tool (at an impressive scale).
Your.move.creep