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Olympics 2024: A Games turbocharged by AI

08.06.24
Paris is a city swamped in security. Forty thousand barriers divide the French capital. Packs of police officers wearing stab vests patrol pretty, cobbled streets. The river Seine is out of bounds to anyone who has not already been vetted and issued a personal QR code. Khaki-clad soldiers, present since the 2015 terrorist attacks, linger near a canal-side boulangerie, wearing berets and clutching large guns to their chests.

French interior minister Gérald Darmanin has justified these measures as vigilance—not overkill. France is facing the “biggest security challenge any country has ever had to organize in a time of peace,” he told reporters.

Parisians are grumbling about road closures and bike lanes that abruptly end without warning, while human rights groups are denouncing “unacceptable risks to fundamental rights.” For the Games, this is nothing new. Complaints about dystopian security are almost an Olympics tradition. Previous iterations have been characterized as Lockdown London, Fortress Tokyo, and the “arms race” in Rio. This time, it is the least-visible security measures that have emerged as some of the most controversial. Security measures in Paris have been turbocharged by a new type of AI, as the city enables controversial algorithms to crawl CCTV footage of transport stations looking for threats.

Morgan Meaker, Senior Writer
At the Olympics, AI Is Watching You
BY MORGAN MEAKER | 4-MINUTE READ
A controversial new surveillance system in Paris foreshadows a future where there are too many CCTV cameras for humans to physically watch.
The Incredible Simone Biles
Take a closer look at the gold medal-winning Yurchenko double pike, dubbed the ‘Biles II’. Rhett Allain breaks down how it’s possible.

 

Read more: The physics of Simone Biles’ Yurchenko Double Pike

One of the Most Daunting Sports
If you thought Mondo Duplantis’ gold-winning pole vault looked almost impossible, you’re right. Rhett Allain explains.

 

Read more: A self-healing pole vault pole is one great leap for sports tech

No, the Seine Cleanup Wasn’t a Failure
BY HELEN MASSY-BERESFORD | 5-MINUTE READ
The goal of the Seine-cleansing project is to produce swimmable conditions for the people of Paris for years to come—the Olympics was just a milestone in getting there.
Why Paris 2024 Olympic Athletes Are Sleeping on Cardboard Beds
BY RICCARDO PICCOLO | 2-MINUTE READ
The competitors’ bedroom furniture is simply stiff paper, along with coffee tables made from badminton shuttlecocks and ottomans made from parachute fabric. And as for durability, this gear can go the distance.
Don’t Think Breakdancing Is a ‘Real’ Olympic Sport? The World Champ Agrees (Kinda)
BY DEXTER THOMAS | 13-MINUTE READ
As the breaking final takes place on August 10, Phil Wizard, the top-ranked B-boy in the world, is looking for a gold medal. But he isn’t convinced breaking is a sport.
What Climber Jesse Grupper Is Bringing to the Olympics
BY ADRIENNE SO | 5-MINUTE READ
If you’re inspired to take up climbing while Grupper competes in the semi-finals tomorrow, this is the forearm massager, climbing shoes, and ice vest (hello, climate change) that you need.

Plus: For all of WIRED’s Olympics coverage, visit

wired.com/olympics

 

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