Business
Veritone to Provide Six Months of Video Redaction Software to Law Enforcement Agencies in Receipt of Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) Grant for Body-Worn Cameras
Veritone Redact helps law agencies significantly reduce the labor intensive task of redacting personally identifiable information (PII) within video and

About this update from Veritone, Inc.
[{"type":"text","content":"\nVeritone Redact helps law agencies significantly reduce the labor intensive task of redacting personally identifiable information (PII) within video and audio evidence, accelerating timely release of video evidence, improving transparency and building officer trust\n\n DENVER--(BUSINESS WIRE)--\nVeritone, Inc. (Nasdaq: VERI), the creator of the world’s first operating system for artificial intelligence, aiWARE™, today announced all law enforcement agencies which acquire body-worn cameras (BWCs) through the recently announced Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) grant are eligible for six months of the company’s video redaction software at no charge. Used by hundreds of law enforcement agencies across the country, Veritone Redact helps agencies significantly reduce the labor intensive task of redacting personally identifiable information (PII) within video and audio evidence. By greatly accelerating the timely release of video evidence from officer-involved incidents, agencies enhance their transparency and build trust within the communities they serve.\nThis press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210719005209/en/\nThe BJA’s grant will fund BWCs for any law enforcement department within 50 or fewer full-time sworn personnel, rural agencies (those agencies within non-urban or non-metro counties); and federally-recognized Tribal agencies.\n\nAccording to a 2017 report released by CNA, which analyzed the behavior of over 400 officers, BWC-wearing officers generated significantly fewer complaints and use of force reports relative to control officers without cameras. BWC-wearing officers also made more arrests and issued more citations than their non-BWC-wearing controls. While these findings are clearly beneficial to agencies and communities alike, this massive collection of video files has introduced unintended consequences.\n\nPublic records workflow and disclosure specialists GovQA’s Peers in Public Records report indicates since 2018, there has been a 200% upswing in public records requests for the release of video produced by body-worn cameras. Most law enforcement agencies are not adequately staffed to keep up with this demand due to the amount of time required to remove PII from this video and audio evidence prior to disclosure.\n\n“Shortly after we introduced ou...