
Since the dawn of time, humans have created tools to make life easier. From stone axes to steam engines, each innovation aimed to solve a problem more efficiently than before. Fast forward to the mid-20th century, and we find ourselves inventing one of the most transformative tools yet—computers. These early computers were massive, expensive, and

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how we manage AI. The IJIS Institute hosted a Justice and Public Safety AI Summit earlier this month in Reston, VA. Like most IJIS events, it attracted an interesting mix of practitioners from solution providers, federal, state and local agencies and non-profits all trying to wrap their heads

Most engineers and musicians of a certain age know and respect the futurist Ray Kurzweil who is now a Google AI thought leader. I was struck by this quote from his latest book The Singularity is Nearer: Any kind of skill that generates clear enough performance feedback data can be turned into a deep-learning model

Lately, when I talk to other technology leaders about what they are most worried about AI and security both top every list. But the intersection of these is still the wild west with each organization/provider racing to learn and adapt quickly, but mostly on their own. In that context, the CoSAI OASIS Open Project is

At Cabral Consulting, our mission is to inspire and lead public and private sector justice, legal and public safety organizations through the ongoing technology transformation of justice processes. This transformation leverages existing technologies including cloud services and open standards, as well as emerging technologies such as AI and modern identity, to better serve all participants,