In a busy city passageway with low lighting, a pickpocket utilizes deception to take a wallet out of the pocket of an unsuspecting man. When the man discovers that his wallet and the vital documents within are missing, he runs to the closest police station as soon as possible.
This situation is all too familiar across India. However, there is not much the police can do, at least not in a sea of unstructured data and outdated record-keeping systems.
However, a Gurugram-based tech startup is hoping to change the game with its AI-powered platform. Staqu Technologies, founded in 2015 by a team of AI experts, has been quietly working towards redefining law enforcement in India. Their flagship product, Trinetra 2.0, integrates a powerful language model called Crime GPT, which is set to revolutionise the way security forces approach criminal investigations.
When it comes to big data, photos and videos make up the majority of the data that is currently available online. The goal was to leverage big data from India to improve these analogue or dumb cameras, according to sources cited by Staqu co-founder and CEO Atul Rai.
Also read: FY24, direct tax collections surpass projections, increasing by 18% to Rs 19.58 lakh crore