Archive for July, 2017

Tennessee company’s tool has rescued 6K trafficking victims – Chattanooga Times Free Press

FRANKLIN, Tenn. (AP) - At a prostitution sting inside a New Orleans hotel, Franklin software engineer John Wagster took ample notes. Two teenage girls had been advertised online and the police officers he accompanied were after their pimps.

Wagster was well acquainted with the horrors of child sex trafficking. His employer, Digital Reasoning in Franklin, had been tapped by Ashton Kutcher's and Demi Moore's nonprofit called Thorn to develop software that would help law enforcement officers rescue victims more quickly. The Louisiana police were using Digital Reasoning's new software and Wagster wanted to refine it.

The software, called Spotlight, allows law enforcement to find online ads most likely advertising underage girls being trafficked and to significantly reduce investigation time. That means more time to find other victims and save more young girls. In the case of the New Orleans sting, law enforcement's first two calls proved to be girls controlled by pimps, Wagster said.

"They finished the night an hour ahead of schedule," Wagster said. "They were way more effective because of it."

Since launching in 2014, Digital Reasoning's software tool has helped rescue 6,000 sex trafficking victims, a third of whom are children. Spotlight is used by 4,000 law enforcement officers nationwide and it is now helping find victims in Canada.

"This is the most widely used sex trafficking investigations tool in the world," said Thorn CEO Julie Cordua. "You are cutting the time to get to this child almost by half but then also doubling the capacity of the existing officers out there doing this work."

Thorn, based in Los Angeles, was created four years ago by actors Kutcher and Moore to combat online child sex abuse. They observed an online marketplace rampant with escort ads, many of which featured underage teens and children. The massive volume of the online ads was hampering law enforcement's abilities to rescue victims, Cordua said.

Based on interviews with hundreds of rescued girls, Thorn had determined patterns that often show up when an ad is for a child, and the nonprofit sought to use computer software to identify ads based on those patterns. In search of a tech partner that could develop the algorithm, Cordua cold-called Digital Reasoning, which had been developing a national reputation for its cognitive computing methods.

"To their incredible credit, they said, 'Yes, we will do this with you,'" Cordua said.

Digital Reasoning President Tim Estes created the company in 2000. He was a recent college graduate and had developed software that could analyze vast quantities of communications. By 2012, when Thorn reached out to Digital Reasoning, the company had landed contracts with the federal government to assist with intelligence gathering and with leading financial institutions on compliance.

More recently the company, staffed with nearly 200 employees globally, has begun working with HCA on health care data. Since 2014, the company has raised more than $76 million from Goldman Sachs, Credit Suisse, Nasdaq and other investors.

Estes said when the call came from Thorn, his team was eager to join their work.

"They showed us the chilling growth in exploiting children online that had happened in the last seven to 10 years," Estes said. "It was very compelling and became a big moral mission for us."

Bill DiPietro, head of Digital Reasoning's product management, and Wagster led the development of the algorithm, working with law enforcement in California and Arizona to study the challenges they faced and their methods. At the time, some law enforcement officers were using Google searches and relying on pencil and paper to find victims and set up stings, Wagster said.

Wagster, called "Wags," observed what clues agents looked for when scanning online ads and trained the software to automate that part of their search process. The software could then point them to the most promising leads.

"The whole goal of what we are trying to do is build software that can do some of the repetitive or redundant tasks on behalf of knowledge workers," DiPietro said. "Wags was giving them a list, here is the priority. If you are going to call girls, start here and work your way down. That was proving some of the success."

Spotlight does not replace the role of officers in any way, but it makes them more efficient, Wagster said.

"A big part of Spotlight is empowering officers to feel like they have the ability to pivot and to search through the data to come to their own conclusions," Wagster said. "It's about building a tool that lets them do their job."

Thorn raised funds from the private sector, including from the McCain Institute in Arizona, to build out the full application. The tools were provided to law enforcement agencies for free.

U.S. Sen. Bob Corker, a Tennessee Republican, has made human and sex trafficking a focal point of his leadership through his End Modern Slavery initiative and praised Digital Reasoning's contributions.

"It is really helping solve the problem, saving years and years of work that it would take, in some cases, to apprehend folks," Corker said. "This is morally unambiguous and represents a threat to every community, and here they are."

At Corker's invitation, Kutcher gave a sobering testimony in February to the U.S. Congress on child sex abuse. During his address, he pointed to Digital Reasoning's role, as well as the value of private and public partnerships in solving this problem.

"The benefit of being a nonprofit and building these types of technology and being 100 percent privately funded is that we can move as quickly as we want and we talk directly to the officers and build what they need," Cordua said.

Amid the lengthy resume each of the Digital Reasoning leaders is accumulating, they have pointed to their work with Thorn as a high point in their career, if not their most meaningful project.

"Any time you get to work on being a mission-driven organization, it's very rewarding," DiPietro said. "Technologically, it's an interesting problem and a hard problem to solve. On top of that, it's for a great mission."

Cordua said Thorn is exploring further partnership with law enforcement agencies to improve Spotlight's capabilities with more data, including criminal records.

Meanwhile, new Senate legislation sponsored by Corker has been introduced in recent weeks to improve data collection and reporting on human trafficking crimes and to extend programs targeting the issue.

"We talk about rescuing juveniles, but there are a lot of criminals who are making money off those juveniles and only a fraction of them have really been prosecuted because we don't have that data," Estes said. "If we can connect that together, then that's the next story."

___

Information from: The Tennessean, http://www.tennessean.com

Excerpt from:
Tennessee company's tool has rescued 6K trafficking victims - Chattanooga Times Free Press

Great big list of must-have software for Windows 10 – Komando

Here at Komando.com, we always scour the web far and wide for absolutely useful software tools that can help you become more efficient, productive and computer frustration-free.

We curate this selection intensively and test and scrutinize each download carefully to make sure it's safe and it's free from nasty extras like bloatware and add-ons you won't need. Needless to say, we use this selection of software tools ourselves!

To review our archive of Windows 10 software tools here's a great big list of the must-have applicationswe have collected so far.

Are you looking for software that will make you work moreefficiently? Then try these free Windows 10 productivity software we found.

The excellent productivity suite Microsoft Essentials was a must-have bundled download for Windows 8.1 and 10 users. However, Microsoft stopped offering it and discontinued its supportearlier this year. Fortunately,we found updated alternative apps that could replace the Essential Bundle -Microsoft Photos, Movie Moments and Open Live Writer.

Microsoft Word veterans looking for a Word alternative should feel right at home with the cloud-basedZoho Writer. It can even replace it for your basic word processing needs. Zoho even has a Microsoft Word plugin for tighter interoperability. Note: Writer is just one of Zoho's excellent productivity tools.Click here to learn more about Zoho's line of productivity software.

If you're looking for a way to stand out among the pool of job applicants, a great resume is a must. Try these 50 effective resume downloads from FreeResumes. The attractive, eye-catching designs were craftedby professional graphic designers who make beautiful digital creations for a living, so you know they're good.

Do you have a hard time keeping track of your household's finances? Then this free personal accounting tool Homebankcan help you out. This program can assist you with budgeting, planning and it comes with reporting tools to track where exactly your money is going and coming from.

Is your desktop a constant cluttered mess of open windows and tabs?AquaSnap may just be the lifesaver you're looking for. This free tool goes beyond Window's built-in multitasking features. You can quickly resize windows, stretch them into different shapes, and rearrange them, depending on what you need to do.

Previous Downloads

Random Downloads

See more here:
Great big list of must-have software for Windows 10 - Komando

Conflicting rulings cloud stand-your-ground law – FOX 13 News, Tampa Bay

TAMPA (FOX 13) - Recently, a Miami judge stirred the pot on an already controversial stand-your-ground law.

Two months ago, lawmakers tweaked the states law and shifted the burden from the shooter to the prosecutor. Now the state attorney has to prove the shooter was not acting in self-defense.

A Miami judge ruled the new law was unconstitutional because he said lawmakers overstepped their authority. The judge said, under Florida's Constitution, only the Supreme Court can make those changes

Hillsborough's new state attorney, Andrew Warren, thinks the new law is anti-law-and-order.

"There is chaos and confusion in the system and that was a foreseeable consequence of this legislation, he said. This law makes it harder to prosecute crimes.

Warren believes shifting the burden to prosecutors makes it easier for criminals to get away with it -- and in Tampa, defendants are not wasting any time.

"We've probably had more stand-your-ground motions in the last few weeks than in the six months prior, Warren continued. We have violent offenders that are trying to exploit this loophole to avoid prosecution.

Just this week, the new stand your ground law was already being tested in a Tampa courtroom. Randolph Graham, accused of killing a former USF football player, wanted the new law applied in his case.

Prosecutors fought it claiming it wasn't retroactive, but a Tampa judge disagreed. A day later, different judge from South Florida ruled the law is not retroactive.

Two conflicting rulings in two days.

Warren doesn't think the chaos and confusion will go away anytime soon. It could take months or years before we have some clarity on what the legislature was trying to do.

Warren believes the issue will make it all the way to our state Supreme Court.

Excerpt from:
Conflicting rulings cloud stand-your-ground law - FOX 13 News, Tampa Bay

In Case You Missed It: Austin Petersen, Second Amendment, CNN. – Being Libertarian


Being Libertarian
In Case You Missed It: Austin Petersen, Second Amendment, CNN.
Being Libertarian
Welcome to the fifth installment of In Case You Missed It, a weekly news roundup that focuses on some of the biggest news stories from around the globe every week. So, in case you missed it, here's your week in review: ...

Follow this link:
In Case You Missed It: Austin Petersen, Second Amendment, CNN. - Being Libertarian

G20 summit likely to grapple with migrant crisis – Eyewitness News

G20 summit likely to grapple with migrant crisis

By 2020, it will cost Germany $107 million a year to look after the migrants its taken in.

US President Donald Trump and German Chancellor Angela Merkel arrive for a bilateral meeting on the eve of the G20 summit in Hamburg, northern Germany, on 6 July 2017. Picture: AFP.

PRETORIA - The G20 summit in Germany is likely to grapple with solutions to the migrant crisis, with some suggesting investment in Africa would curb the growing number of people leaving the continent to find a better life in Europe.

This argument will likely find currency with those industrialised countries that have the means to take the bet.

Follow the money and it's obvious why theres a rush of migrants from Africa to Europe.

The average annual income in Europe is $33,248. The equivalent figure for sub-Saharan Africa is $1,504.

Another look at the figures shows why Europe cannot sustain the influx.

By 2020, it will cost Germany $107 million a year to look after the migrants its taken in.

Last year, it accommodated more than 750,000 refugees.

Germany has a compelling case for urging G20 colleagues to spread the load.

However, we will NOT condone the following:

- Racism (including offensive comments based on ethnicity and nationality) - Sexism - Homophobia - Religious intolerance - Cyber bullying - Hate speech - Derogatory language - Comments inciting violence.

We ask that your comments remain relevant to the articles they appear on and do not include general banter or conversation as this dilutes the effectiveness of the comments section.

We strive to make the EWN community a safe and welcoming space for all.

EWN reserves the right to: 1) remove any comments that do not follow the above guidelines; and, 2) ban users who repeatedly infringe the rules.

Should you find any comments upsetting or offensive you can also flag them and we will assess it against our guidelines.

EWN is constantly reviewing its comments policy in order to create an environment conducive to constructive conversations.

View post:
G20 summit likely to grapple with migrant crisis - Eyewitness News