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Continuing the fight against cybersex trafficking

An article published by NBC News discussed how the sexual exploitation of children, referred to as cybersex trafficking, is increasing—fueled by inexpensive technology, untraceable online payment systems, and criminals who are willing to reduce themselves to the lowest levels of human depravity to make money.

Foster care and parenting expert Dr. John Degarmo, in a Huffington Post article, said “Child pornography has found a welcome home on the internet, and is in truth a multi-billion dollar online 100,000 sites dedicated to the crime, and is one of the fastest growing online businesses.”

 

DISTURBING TRENDS

Thorn, an organization dedicated to working with government agencies and private sector companies in combating child exploitation, has published some disturbing statistics on its website.

  • Child sexual abuse images and videos found online involve both boys and girls from 0-18 years old.
  • In an assessment of reports to its tipline, the Canadian Centre for Child Protection found that children under 12 years old were depicted in 78% of the images and videos assessed by its team, and 63% of those children were under eight years of age.
  • Among that same material, they found that 80% of the children were girls, while 20% were boys.
  • Multiple images that depict the same child become a record of abuse and can be shared many times over, far beyond the instance of abuse, resulting in further trauma into adulthood.

 

TAKING A STRONG STAND

At the core of our mission is enabling investigations of all sorts to take place with unparalleled speed, scale, and accuracy. In addition, we strive to ensure that data of all types, from social media to emails, from databases to documents, and from log files to registry hives, is understood, accessible, and fully indexable so that investigations, regardless of who is conducting them or why, can take place faster than ever.

For all of us at Nuix, this is a relentless pursuit for which there is no finish line, no time to call it quits, and no expectation of the pace slowing down. As technology is further integrated into every aspect of our daily lives, from the cars we drive to the tech we wear, there will be an ever-increasing stream of data types in ever-increasing volumes. Moore’s Law (the concept first introduced in 1965 by Gordon E. Moore, which basically states that processing power—roughly measured by the number of transistors on a computer chip—doubles every couple of years) is alive and well, moving at a pace we’ve never seen in our history.

Soon, the rate of innovation will cease to be an upward arch, and will more resemble the trajectory of a rocket, almost completely vertical. What was impossible just two years ago is now commonplace, and what is impossible today will be commonplace two years from now. Sadly, that includes crimes that will be fueled by the technology we so richly embrace.

Alongside government agencies, law enforcement, public advocacy groups like Thorn and the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, and other like-minded private sector companies, Nuix is creating some pretty amazing technology of our own that will have a material impact on catching the perpetrators of these most heinous crimes, and bringing them to justice.

Nuix is in the fight, and failure is not an option.