Justice & Public Safety
-
In the two years since the state released guidance for localities interested in speed or red-light cameras, fewer than 10 percent of its municipalities have submitted and won approval of plans.
-
Responder MAX will focus on marketing, communications, recruitment and other areas. First Arriving, which has worked with some 1,300 agencies, will keep involved with its "real-time information platform."
-
San Jose is the latest city whose use of the cameras to snag criminal suspects, critics say, also threatens privacy and potentially runs afoul of laws barring access by out-of-state and federal agencies.
More Stories
-
Position will provide focal point for coordination of FEMA's continuing recovery work
-
Neutral-host system is configured to support all new cellular devices and handheld technology for the next 10-15 years
-
"The state of Michigan must send a clear message that the private, personal information of Michigan consumers is not a commodity and is not for sale"
-
Ensuring that our commonwealth's first responders can communicate effectively is a critical concern
-
Survey reveals Internet user's top concerns: viruses and identity theft
-
"This new legislation will ensure that if you commit the worst kind of violent sexual crime against a child, you will go to prison for a minimum of 25 years"
-
"...the traditional telephone based 9-1-1 call is the best choice"
-
-
DHS "falling short in fulfilling its basic obligations to state and local governments" says Thompson
-
"One of the linchpins is to get cybersecurity included in the DHS's state homeland security assessment and strategy process, which is the national protocol that drives state homeland security spending. Currently, that process excludes cybersecurity entirely, so we weren't surprised to find most states' overall preparedness to be seriously lacking"
-
"Not only did this product fail to detect and remove spyware on the consumer's computer, it actually tampered with security settings to make the machine even more vulnerable"
-
Users included fashion moguls like Ralph Lauren and Calvin Klein, the sports-related Lance Armstrong Foundation and entertainment figures such as newscaster Larry King and actor Morgan Freeman
-
An Internet-based system enabling health care personnel and citizens to pre-register and volunteer to provide assistance during an emergency
-
A federal district court in Nevada has ruled that Google does not violate copyright law when it copies websites, stores the copies, and transmits them to Internet users as part of its Google Cache feature
-
"Cities and counties will be able to track their police cars and street sweepers as they move through the region. If sensors indicate that a remote water pump is failing, the pump will be able to send a request for a repair crew"
-
Citing Katrina Experience, New Orleans Health Officials Plead for Better Communications CapabilitiesClearing the way for emergency workers to adopt cutting-edge communications equipment
-
Last week, Harvard University's Berkman Center and the Oxford Internet Institute launched a "Neighborhood Watch" initiative against spyware and other malicious software programs
-
A Texas grocery store turned police station presented technological challenges.
Most Read
- Tennessee CIO on Agentic AI, Govt.’s ‘Inflection Point’
- American Medical Association Funds AI in Medical Education
- Virginia Beach, Va., Debuts Smart Parking, Real-Time Insight
- What vessel is this autonomous helicopter designed to hunt down?
- California's Education Savings Accounts Help Students Access Tech