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Re: Fearless Stocks post# 92052

Tuesday, 08/13/2024 1:10:33 PM

Tuesday, August 13, 2024 1:10:33 PM

Post# of 96525
$VXIT LOL New York City does not have any scanners yet! You did not comprehend the article posted. So I'll help you with that:
New York City started scanning subway riders for weapons at select stations Friday, as part of a controversial 30-day pilot program.
"We're officially launching an initial pilot of a groundbreaking new weapons detection technology. Mayor Eric Adams said.

The essential reason for "testing and cooperation with the Science & Technology Directorate (DHS), the Company has improved the Passive Portal's filtering and sensing capabilities validation & was conducted for the New York City weapons safety program!!

Initial Testing, as confirmed during a conference call with the Test Center: A flawless scanning performance & proves the superior technology of our Passive Portal.
Final field test on August 19/20th. https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/219758



DTII PR: Start of National Marketing Campaign:

https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/215616/Defense-Technologies-International-Corp.-National-Marketing-Campaign-Expanding-Sales-Across-the-USA-and-the-World
The Company is disseminating a Campaign Package for distribution across the Country to: Governors Offices, States and Federal Government Offices, School Districts; Police Departments: Medical Centers and more.
First Initiatives:
Contact with Uvalde Texas expecting to present our Passive Portal in the Uvalde School districts.
The Company is looking at the situation in New York to evaluate and present a solution to the city's weapons safety program throughout its public venues.


Published issues with Evolv Scanner Technology>
Internal Emails Reveal How a Controversial Gun-Detection AI System Found Its Way to NYC

NYC mayor Eric Adams wants to test Evolv’s gun-detection tech in subway stations—despite the company saying it’s not designed for that environment. Emails obtained by WIRED show how the company still found an in. If Evolv’s accuracy in a hospital was low, its accuracy in NYC subway stations may be worse. In an investor call on March 15, 2024, Peter George, the company’s CEO, admitted that the technology was not geared toward subway stations. “Subways, in particular, are not a place that we think is a good use case for us,” George said, due to the “interference with the railways.” IPO Edge interviewed Evolv CEO Peter George to discuss the company’s recently-announced business combination with NewHold Investment Corp. (“NewHold”) (Nasdaq: NHIC) – a SPAC deal resulting in a $1.7 billion valuation for Evolv

The Mayor’s Office has been keen to stress that it is not set on Evolv being a permanent fixture. “To be clear, we have NOT said we are putting Evolv technology in the subway stations,” Kayla Mamelak, deputy press secretary of the Mayor’s Office, tells WIRED in an email. “We said that we are opening a 90-day period to explore using technology, such as Evolv, in our subway stations.” The NYC subway has 472 stations. “That is roughly 1,000 subway station entrances,” explains Sarah Kaufman, director of the New York University’s Rudin Center for Transportation. “

https://www.wired.com/story/evolv-gun-detection-nyc-subways-emails/



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