MobileNews

NYPD will replace handwritten logs with an iPhone app later this month

After more than a century, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) is retiring the handwritten memo books carried by police officers and replacing them with an app, The New York Times reports. On February 17th, officers will begin recording their detailed activity logs in an iOS app on department-issued iPhones.

The app will send notes to a department database, which offers a few benefits over the physical notebooks. It could eliminate potential abuses, like faking entries in order to get search warrants, and headaches, like having to interpret illegible handwriting. Plus, individual officers won’t have to keep track of dozens of notebooks. Instead the logs will be managed in the database, and officers will be able to do quick database searches through the app when they’re in the field.

Of course, there are potential drawbacks. Police union officials fear the app could lead to invasive real-time tracking of officers’ locations, and unlike physical notebooks, phones can stop working and be hacked. The NYPD won’t be alone, though. As you’d expect, many major departments across the US have already moved away from log books.

Check out the latest Apple iPhones at great prices from Gizmofashion – our recommended retail partner.


Author: Christine Fisher.
Source: Engadget

Related posts
AI & RoboticsNews

Medical training’s AI leap: How agentic RAG, open-weight LLMs and real-time case insights are shaping a new generation of doctors at NYU Langone

AI & RoboticsNews

OpenAI’s ChatGPT explodes to 400M weekly users, with GPT-5 on the way

AI & RoboticsNews

Together AI’s $305M bet: Reasoning models like DeepSeek-R1 are increasing, not decreasing, GPU demand

DefenseNews

Army Stinger missile replacement competition heads into flight tests

Sign up for our Newsletter and
stay informed!

Worth reading...
Motorola Razr teardown looks inside the flexible phone