A Nashville school district invested about $1 million in AI gun identification software, the school district said, leaving some to wonder what went wrong in detecting a school shooter in the halls.
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A deadly shooting at Antioch High School on Wednesday has raised questions around school safety and the district's use of a $1 million artificial intelligence system that didn't flag the shooter's ...
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) - Update: WSMV4 Investigates has confirmed with the Metro Nashville Police Department that two guns were removed from the home of Antioch High School shooter Solomon ...
(AP video/Kristin M. Hall) Nashville school officials said an AI gun detection system at a high school didn’t activate an alarm prior to a shooting in which one student killed another and then killed ...
Several Tennessee counties were hit with serious flooding over the weekend, the flu claims another child in TN, and snow is on the way. Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) trucks hit the ...
The software, called Omnilert, failed to detect the gun because of where cameras were in Antioch High School, Metro Nashville Public Schools spokesperson Sean Braisted said at a news conference ...
An artificial intelligence-powered weapon detection software installed on cameras at Antioch High School failed to pick up on a student's gun during a deadly shooting Wednesday, according to a ...
The gun had nine rounds remaining when it was recovered by authorities. No other weapons were found inside Solomon's home, police said. NewsChannel 5 Investigates found two different documents ...
According to the Metro Nashville Police Department (MNPD), a continuing investigation into the murder-suicide at Antioch High School reveals that 17-year-old Solomon Henderson’s gun was loaded ...