Veritone's transparency tools include Illuminate, Redact, and IDentify. Illuminate uses artificial intelligence to cull unstructured video and audio for key content needed by an agency; Redact uses AI models to make video and audio redaction much faster and much more accurate; and IDentify uses facial recognition and AI to let agencies quickly compare photos of individuals at crime scenes with their own and with other agencies' booking photos, as permitted.
Gacek said that Veritone's aiWare is so powerful that the San Francisco Giants baseball team is using it to search through decades of TV broadcast video and film to find key images of players making specific plays in front of specific backgrounds.
Gacek said that AI is critical for the future of law enforcement transparency. "Public request volume is growing," he said. And that is making agencies spend more money and dedicate more resources for operations like redaction. According to Gacek, it has been estimated that for every 75 body cameras used by an agency the agency has to hire one additional person to handle redaction. He added that he knew of one large American law enforcement agency that has a $25 million budget for redaction.
Following Gacek's keynote, Sgt. Jason Druckenmiller of the Oregon (OH) Police Department presented a case study on Veritone Redact and how it has helped his agency achieve greater transparency.
The Oregon (OH) PD—48 sworn—was one of the first agencies in its region to equip officers with body-worn cameras. Druckenmiller says the agency's chief, Michael J. Navarre, was very interested in making operations more transparent to the community. Which led to a discussion of how to redact the videos.