@eletrotupi @glitterwitch Stanford studied police cam footage for over a year, and found a strong correlation between whether the cop was respectful (using words like "please", "sir", "ma'am" vs. barking out orders with words like "bro", "homey") and skin color. And if you study police attitude & language for a particular intervention, the race could be determined ~70% of the time.
@resist1984 @glitterwitch Meanwhile researchers at Arizona analized over the course of four years of footage and come to the terms that it bodycams didn't made them less agressive whatsoever.
There are various studies and different degree of results.
I think we have enough data to know that bodycameras isn't enough and it's time to move on to more radical changes.
@eletrotupi @glitterwitch can you give a link to that study? It contradicts everything we've seen. Cameras have proven to reduce violence over decades. It's in fact why prisons have cameras, according to Edward Snowden.
"everything we've seen"
I needed one googling and have found several articles, here are some of them:
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/12/02/us/nypd-body-cameras-report/index.html
https://gizmodo.com/why-body-cameras-arent-a-cure-all-for-police-violence-1663231540
@glitterwitch @eletrotupi "The NYPD was mandated in 2013 by Manhattan federal Judge Analisa Torres to start a pilot program for body-worn cameras as a way to fix the racial disparity" <= so the purpose was not to reduce violence, it was to promote racial equality, and the Stanford study supports that.
@eletrotupi @glitterwitch a BWC is a cheap way to improve quality control.