Event Details

Just after World War II

Description

Kodak and Ilford perfected a film to reveal interactions of elementary particles but kept the composition a trade secret.

Participants (3)

Name Type Mentions
Physicists person 2 View Entity
Ilford organization 15 View Entity
Kodak organization 34 View Entity

Source Documents (1)

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016383.jpg

Academic Essay / Legal Article (House Oversight Document)
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This document is page 163 of a House Oversight production (Bates HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016383). It contains the text of an academic or philosophical essay discussing the dangers of 'mechanical objectivity' and the use of algorithms ('algorists') in criminal justice sentencing. The author argues against relying on 'black box' algorithms that hide trade secrets, citing Rebecca Wexler's 2018 work on intellectual property in the criminal justice system and drawing parallels to historical issues in physics with Kodak and Ilford film.

Related Events

Events with shared participants

Kodak and Ilford perfected a film for physics but kept the composition a trade secret.

Date unknown • N/A

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Kodak and Ilford perfected a film for revealing elementary particles but kept the composition a trade secret, frustrating physicists.

Date unknown • Global (Historical context)

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Narrator's stay at IHES

Date unknown • IHES

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Date Eastman Kodak supposedly began manufacturing the film type used.

1945-01-01 • Unknown

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Event Metadata

Type
Unknown
Location
Global/Historical Context
Significance Score
5/10
Participants
3
Source Documents
1
Extracted
2025-11-19 15:34

Additional Data

Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016383.jpg
Date String
Just after World War II

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