Justice & Public Safety
-
The White House is expected to give the New York Police Department the authority to ground unauthorized drones around major events. The department also plans to roll out a new 311 dispatch system.
-
The county's Department of Public Safety Communications and Emergency Management upgraded its computer-aided dispatching system to one that is cloud-based and can work more easily with neighboring agencies.
-
The new technology, which the police department in Norwalk, Conn., recently launched, “makes things a whole lot easier,” its Chief James Walsh said. The software is an upgrade to officer cameras.
More Stories
-
"The Senate should ratify the Convention on Cybercrime, adopted through the Council of Europe, which the Bush Administration signed in 2001 and has been approved by the Committee on Foreign Relations, but has been held back by anonymous 'holds' for unclear reasons"
-
Seeks comment on whether certain channels within the 24 MHz of spectrum in the 700 MHz band allocated for public safety use should be modified to accommodate broadband communications
-
The National Consumers League (NCL) said it has joined forces with law enforcement, financial services and technical industries to combat phishing scams
-
Annual conference, briefing, and public training work shop on GJXDM
-
Mayor Bill White thanks Houston's congressional delegation
-
"Not a single BPL trial has included a thorough examination of interference issues if deployed on a large scale. It is premature to pronounce these tests to be a complete success"
-
Funds may be used for training, personnel, equipment and information systems for law enforcement programs
-
Free online resource where organizations may register their websites and receive notifications of online fraud attempts
-
"We developed AlaSafe.gov to help law enforcement agencies have access to information they will need so they can more quickly identify, confirm and return these individuals to their families or caregivers"
-
-
America need not rush out to create a new bureaucracy to mimic Europe's approach to solving the privacy dilemma, but Americans deserve much more respect from the institutions, both public and private, that serve them
-
A team of researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is studying whether RFID technology can be used as a low cost, reliable means to track firefighters and other first responders inside buildings and help them navigate under hazardous conditions
-
In June, the FCC gave Internet-based phone service companies 120 days to create an E911 system, and provide all of its customers, wherever they are in the U.S., with E911 service
-
"Shared-use facilities hold the potential to improve the security of data by eliminating unneeded transmission links and standardizing security formats between the partners"
-
Clyde E. Cristman of Glen Allen will serve as deputy secretary of Public Safety
-
Designed to determine the operational feasibility, effectiveness, and cost of commercially available screening technology installed in a mobile container
-
$1 million received in funds from Department of Homeland Security for program
-
Says putting federal government in charge would cost lives, add bureaucracy
Most Read
- Massachusetts’ New Equity Plan Targets Digital Access Gaps
- How many companies in N.Y. have reported replacing employees with AI?
- Chandler, Ariz., May Expand Use of IT Management Solution
- Missouri Lawmakers Consider Limits to AI Identity, Deepfakes
- Williamson County, Ill., Approves Cybersecurity Pact