Author Topic: Because, God forbid, we avoid high crime areas  (Read 408 times)

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sirs

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Because, God forbid, we avoid high crime areas
« on: January 18, 2012, 04:59:11 PM »
Frellin amazing.....folks at the mutation known as the NAACP (A once honored and appropriate organization) are up in arms that there's an app being worked on that will allow folks to better avoid high crime areas......because that's apparently discrimanatory.  Please, someone try to defend why that is    >:(
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App That Would Guide Users Away From High-Crime Areas Proves Controversial
January 17, 2012

An in-development Microsoft smart phone app designed to help drivers and pedestrians avoid unsafe neighborhoods is proving controversial among some minority rights groups that find the software potentially discriminatory.

The as-of-yet unnamed product is being referred to as the “Avoid The Ghetto” app by those who are concerned with where it will guide users.

“I’m going to be up in arms about it if it happens,” said Dallas NAACP President Juanita Wallace.

Wallace spent her afternoon at a rally on Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. and said she felt safe there, but fears the app may project otherwise.

“Can you imagine me not being able to go to MLK Blvd. because my GPS says that’s a dangerous crime area? I can’t even imagine that,” she said.

Microsoft says the app will use crime statistics to determine what parts of town are to be avoided. But it’s unclear where the data will come from and how it will be interpreted.

Microsoft has filed a patent for the app, but the actual product is unnamed and not available yet.

Opponents like Wallace fear it could hurt minority communities.

“It’s almost like gerrymandering,” she said. “It’s stereotyping for sure and without a doubt; I can’t emphasize enough, it’s discriminatory.”

Michael McNally, who was visiting Dallas Tuesday, said an app shouldn’t have enough power to label a community.

“It may have a high crime problem but have some great cultural, social things you can do there,” McNally said.

(SERIOUSLY??  "So, outside of the shooting, what did you think of the Play, Mrs Lincoln?")

Dallas resident Chris Hurst said it sounds like a good safety tool.

“I’d be all for it because you can never be too safe,” he said.

Tommy Jones, who works downtown, said an app like Microsoft’s could hurt a city’s economy.

“From a business standpoint, it could be devastating,” he said. “Especially in the area of tourism.”

Economic development is a major initiative that Mayor Mike Rawlings is pushing in parts of the city that the app may suggest against visiting.

Wallace is concerned this type of technology would continue to perpetuate stereotypes in Dallas and beyond.

“What happens in North Dallas certainly ought to be no different than what happens in South Dallas, so we can’t keep on doing this,” she said. “This type of technology is certainly going to pronounce and heighten it to some degree.”

Microsoft declined to comment, issuing a statement that said the company “does not comment on filed or awarded patents.”


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"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Christians4LessGvt

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Re: Because, God forbid, we avoid high crime areas
« Reply #1 on: January 18, 2012, 05:53:59 PM »
people want to avoid trash no matter what color it is

"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987

sirs

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Re: Because, God forbid, we avoid high crime areas
« Reply #2 on: January 18, 2012, 06:10:33 PM »
That's code for racism, right?  It seems the left knows when someone is making racist comments, even when it would appear there's none, because they can see the "code words/phrases" that we ordinary folks can't.  Even the racists don't catch their own code words apparently.  See all the guff Gingrich is getting from the debates, for daring to call Juan Williams, "Juan"?, or by impressing the need for kids to work and *gasp* make their own money, abiding by a schedule, and building up some *gasp* self esteem
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle