PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Software to prevent abuse at the click of a mouse

Software to prevent abuse at the click of a mouse
2011-11-03
(Press-News.org) Investigators estimate that there are currently more than 15 million photographs of child abuse victims circulating on the Internet. By the time this material has been tracked down and deleted, pedophiles have long since downloaded it to their computers. Many are avid data collectors: when suspects' data media are confiscated, detectives must often click their way through hundreds of thousands of files to find the illegal images they seek. An extremely time-consuming process – until now. Because researchers working with Dr. Bertram Nickolay of the Fraunhofer Institute for Production Systems and Design Technology IPK in Berlin have come up with a program that tackles the job automatedly. The scientists call this tool "desCRY," a seldom-heard word in English meaning "to catch sight of, to discern." "With novel pattern-recognition processes, desCRY rummages through digital photos and videos in search of illegal content, no matter how well-hidden it may be," Nickolay explains. Photos slipped in between harmless snapshots from the beach, or hidden within the action-packed sequences of a Hollywood film. The researcher and his team partnered with investigators from the State Office of Criminal Investigation in Berlin to develop a system tailored to their requirements.

The heart of the software consists of intelligent pattern-recognition algorithms that automatically analyze and classify images and video sequences. "Technologies such as facial and skin-tone recognition are combined with contextual and scene analyses to identify suspicious content," project manager Raul Vicente-Garcia explains. The algorithms use up to several thousand characteristics that describe properties such as color, texture and contours in order to analyze whether an image depicts child abuse. If the system is run on a standard PC, it classifies up to ten images per second, drastically accelerating detectives' investigations.

The software searches all of the files in a computer, e-mail attachments and archives included. Another benefit: Among other features, files can be filtered according to size and type; this makes the work of analysis less time-consuming. What's more: desCRY offers a wide variety of search options. It can perform content-based data sorting and filtering, for instance. This way, investigators can sort files by person, object or location, for example.

The search result is displayed in an image viewer that can accommodate several hundred photos as tiny icons visible at a glance. Suspicious photos are singled out, for instance by displaying them at the top of the list of results. Investigators can enlarge the images with a click of the mouse; a second mouse click stores them as evidence. Still, the system does not make detectives redundant. At the end of the analysis process, an investigator must determine whether the photos classified as illegal really contain prohibited content.

Detectives of the criminal investigation department are currently reviewing the suitability of desCRY in realistic field tests. The system could become part of the Berlin investigators' everyday toolkit by October. And they are not the only ones expected to benefit. The software group SAP has agreed to serve as integration and marketing partner. The group from Walldorf, Germany, has already joined the Fraunhofer IPK in initial discussions with other pilot users internationally.

Criminal authorities in several countries have already shown an interest in the system. As Nickolay points out: "Experts in criminal investigations find our methodology for the identification of child pornography a particularly innovative and promising approach in an international comparison."



INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Software to prevent abuse at the click of a mouse

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A living factory

A living factory
2011-11-03
As soon as DNA is mentioned, we automatically think of biology and living beings. It is the DNA molecule found inside each and every cell that holds the encoded blueprints for humans, animals or plants. But factories too have a master plan of this kind. All modern manufacturing facilities resemble living organisms in their complex structure. And, just as in biology, all their constituent parts are linked to one another and have to be painstakingly coordinated. Now, the Fraunhofer Institute for Optronics, System Technologies and Image Exploitation IOSB in Karlsruhe has taken ...

Lucky Club Casino Offers Million Dollar Jackpot -- Players Can Try Any of the Casino's Brand New Games for Free

2011-11-03
Lucky Club Casino has just given online casino players a million dollar jackpot to shoot for. The Monster Millions progressive jackpot is one of very few seven-figure online slots jackpots and LuckyClub.eu is pleased to bring it to players around the world alongside 30 other completely new online casino games. Monster Millions is the biggest, but certainly not the only jackpot to be won at Lucky Club. Several of the slick new casino's new games feature the Jackpot Pyramid bonus game which keeps the monster fun happening longer and can multiply wins. Many of the casino's ...

New material for air cleaner filters that captures flu viruses

2011-11-03
With flu season just around the corner, scientists are reporting development of a new material for the fiber in face masks, air conditioning filters and air cleaning filters that captures influenza viruses before they can get into people's eyes, noses and mouths and cause infection. The report on the fiber appears in ACS' journal Biomacromolecules. Xuebing Li, Peixing Wu and colleagues explain that in an average year, influenza kills almost 300,000 people and sickens millions more worldwide. The constant emergence of new strains of virus that shrug off vaccines and anti-influenza ...

Benefits of nut consumption for people with abdominal obesity, high blood sugar, high blood pressure

2011-11-03
For the first time, scientists report a link between eating nuts and higher levels of serotonin in the bodies of patients with metabolic syndrome (MetS), who are at high risk for heart disease. Serotonin is a substance that helps transmit nerve signals and decreases feelings of hunger, makes people feel happier and improves heart health. It took only one ounce of mixed nuts (raw unpeeled walnuts, almonds and hazelnuts) a day to produce the good effects. The report appears in ACS' Journal of Proteome Research. Cristina Andrés-Lacueva and colleagues from the Biomarkers ...

Peatland carbon storage is stabilized against catastrophic release of carbon

2011-11-03
Concerns that global warming may have a domino effect —unleashing 600 billion tons of carbon in vast expanses of peat in the Northern hemisphere and accelerating warming to disastrous proportions — may be less justified than previously thought. That's the conclusion of a new study on the topic in ACS' journal Environmental Science & Technology. Christian Blodau and colleagues explain that peat bogs — wet deposits of partially decayed plants that are the source of gardeners' peat moss and fuel — hold about one-third of the world's carbon. Scientists have been concerned ...

Online Auto Insurance: Delaware Recoveries Underscore Importance of Regulators

2011-11-03
The Delaware Insurance Department's recent announcement that it has recovered nearly $2 million this year for auto, homeowner and other policyholders in that state exemplifies the work regulators carry out on behalf of consumers nationwide, according to Online Auto Insurance (OAI). For the average person, filing a claim on a low cost car insurance policy and then trying to work out a settlement with a large insurer can be a daunting task. But regulatory agencies in every state can help residents settle claims that might otherwise never be paid. A vehicle policy is ...

When the fat comes out of food, what goes in?

2011-11-03
When fat, sugar and gluten come out of salad dressings, sauces, cookies, beverages, and other foods with the new genre of package labels shouting what's not there, what goes into "light" or "-free" versions of products to make them taste like the original version? The answers appear in the cover story in the current edition of Chemical & Engineering News, ACS' weekly newsmagazine. In the article Melody Bombgardner, C&EN Senior Business Editor, explains that food processors usually face the problem of reproducing the texture or "mouth feel" of products that have cut back ...

Video game playing tied to creativity

Video game playing tied to creativity
2011-11-03
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Both boys and girls who play video games tend to be more creative, regardless of whether the games are violent or nonviolent, according to new research by Michigan State University scholars. A study of nearly 500 12-year-olds found that the more kids played video games, the more creative they were in tasks such as drawing pictures and writing stories. In contrast, use of cell phones, the Internet and computers (other than for video games) was unrelated to creativity, the study found. Linda Jackson, professor of psychology and lead researcher on ...

Cardiology IT and Consolidation: Will a Leader Emerge?

2011-11-03
Cardiology departments have hosted a variety of software solutions in the past to meet varying demands. A new report from KLAS reveals that the cardiology IT market is moving toward consolidation. The report, "Cardiology 2012: Will the Complete CVIS Please Stand Up?," explains that as a result of the trend toward consolidation providers are looking for a technology leader to step up and meet their needs. This report examines which vendors, providers feel are poised to lead the cardiology market, provide necessary functionality, and offer integration. "Many ...

Ohio State researchers design a viral vector to treat a genetic form of blindness

2011-11-03
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Researchers at Ohio State University Medical Center and Nationwide Children's Hospital have developed a viral vector designed to deliver a gene into the eyes of people born with an inherited, progressive form of blindness that affects mainly males. The vector is part of a clinical trial investigating the use of gene therapy to cure choroideremia, a disease that affects an estimated 100,000 people worldwide. The trial is being conducted by researchers at the University of Oxford in England. The vector was designed by Dr. Matthew During, professor of ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

CABI scientists suggest an accidentally introduced parasitoid could save box trees from ecological extinction

Study finds link between eczema patterns and children’s ability to outgrow food allergies

COVID-19 vaccination linked to reduced infections in children with eczema

Social media helps and hurts when it comes to allergy and asthma education

Oral food challenges and oral immunotherapy offer hope and confidence for families managing food allergies in young children

Thunderstorms linked to surge in asthma ER visits, new study shows

Pregnant women often miss out on specialist allergy care

Military deployment linked to higher risk of respiratory diseases, new study finds

People with allergies or eczema may face higher risk of surgical complications

New research highlights care challenges faced by children and adolescents with hereditary angioedema

Peanut patch treatment continues to help toddlers safely build tolerance over three years

ACAAI community grant projects explore innovative ways to address barriers to care

Newly discovered ‘hook’ in motor protein reveals how neurons deliver cargo with precision

Chung-Ang University researchers develop interlayer material for lithium-sulfur batteries

New study shows invasive Group A Streptococcus outcomes shaped by treatment strategies, not species lineage

Three new toad species skip the tadpole phase and give birth to live toadlets

Increased avoidance learning in chronic opioid users

RODIN project, funded by the European Research Council through a Synergy grant (ERC-Syn), will invest 10 M€ to explore cells as the architects of future biomaterials

ERC Synergy Grant 2025, Diagnosis and treatment in one go with a high-tech hybrid endoscopic device: the future of cancer care

EU awards an €8.33m ERC research grant for project How can we learn to live on Earth in new ways?

First study of its kind finds deep-sea mining waste threatens life and foodwebs in the ocean’s dim “twilight zone”

Early-stage clinical trial demonstrates promise of intranasal influenza vaccine in generating broad immunity

Study identifies which patients benefit most from new schizophrenia drug

Maternal type 1 diabetes may protect children through epigenetic changes

Austrian satellite mission PRETTY continues under the leadership of Graz University of Technology

Trust and fairness are Brazil’s most powerful climate tools, finds new Earth4All analysis ahead of COP30

APA poll reveals a nation suffering from stress of societal division, loneliness

Landscapes that remember: clues show Indigenous Peoples have thrived in the southwestern Amazon for more than 1,000 years

World’s first demonstration of entanglement swapping using sum-frequency generation between single photons

A combination treatment may help cut lifelong ibrutinib for chronic lymphocytic leukemia

[Press-News.org] Software to prevent abuse at the click of a mouse