How UC Berkeley computer science students helped build a database of police misconduct in California
In 2018, California passed the “Right to Know Act,” unsealing three types of internal law enforcement documents: use of force records, sexual assault records, and official dishonesty records. Before ...
Computer Sciences plans to work with the Environmental Protection Agency to develop a database that will serve as a central repository for environmental data. The Central Data Exchange (CDX) will ...
A searchable database of public records concerning use of force and misconduct by California law enforcement officers — some 1.5 million pages from nearly 700 law enforcement agencies — is now ...
Brave Software developers have created a new privacy-centric database query system called FrodoPIR that retrieves data from servers without disclosing the content of user queries. Brave plans to use ...
The latest trends in software development from the Computer Weekly Application Developer Network. This is a guest post for the Computer Weekly Developer Network written by Philip Rathle in his role as ...
Moriba Jah, director of computational astronautical sciences and technologies for the Oden Institute at The University of Texas at Austin, says he would not willingly go into space. “No, not me, man.” ...
Today, the FBI confirmed they have access to the database of the notorious BreachForums (aka Breached) hacking forum after the U.S. Justice Department also officially announced the arrest of its owner ...
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