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Software For Paedophiles

A steady raise in the case of paedophiles have been hovering in the corners of the modern society. Because of its tricky nature, it has been tough to nab, but not any more.
A computer program that can identify paedophiles, who pretend to be children on the Internet, is being developed by scientists at Lancaster University. By analysing language and syntax used online, the new technology can reveal if an adult is masquerading as a child as part of the victim "grooming" process.
"You can distinguish when someone is 25 when they are claiming to be 14, for example. "The project uses a lot of artificial intelligence and a lot of algorithms. We are using language analysis tools to identify someone who is masquerading as a child, and therefore identify people who may be a risk to children.
The scheme, known as Project Isis, will also be able to keep track of secret code words used by paedophiles as file names for child pornography. "The main technique is something called authorship attribution. Research has been done which indicates that there are differences in how people of a particular age group write," the Telegraph quoted Professor Awais Rashid, of Lancaster University, as saying.
If it proves effective, Project Isis could raise Internet privacy concerns. For it to work in practice, it would require a wide range of Internet sites such as chat rooms and peer-to-peer networks to be monitored for tell-tale paedophile language. "We are setting up a stakeholder ethics group of internet service providers, users and other groups who may have concerns about the ethics of monitoring," Rashid said.
A first prototype system has already being devised and is being tested on non-sensitive data. The next step of the three-year project will be to use the software on real-life paedophile material provided by police and other agencies.
"We
are
looking
at
being
able
to
monitor
traffic
in
file-sharing
networks
to
try
to
identify
core
distributors,
who
are
of
interest
to
law
enforcement
agencies
because
they
have
access
to
children
and
are
preparing
photographs
of
these
children
in
abusive
situations.
"Paedophiles use very specific ways of marking these files and searching for them. "To the untrained eye they can look like innocent searches but with our analysis you can isolate them and study how they change," Rashid added.
With the development in such an exclusive software, we can expect some control in this disgusting form of crime.



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