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Sweetie 2.0 - Using Artificial Intelligence to Fight Webcam Child Sex Tourism (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2019)
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Sweetie 2.0 - Using Artificial Intelligence to Fight Webcam Child Sex Tourism (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2019)
Series: Information Technology and Law Series, 31
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This book centres on Webcam Child Sex Tourism and the Sweetie
Project initiated by the children's rights organization Terre des
Hommes in 2013 in response to the exponential increase of online
child abuse. Webcam child sex tourism is a growing international
problem, which not only encourages the abuse and sexual
exploitation of children and provides easy access to child-abuse
images, but which is also a crime involving a relatively low risk
for offenders as live-streamed webcam performances leave few traces
that law enforcement can use. Moreover, webcam child sex tourism
often has a cross-border character, which leads to jurisdictional
conflicts and makes it even harder to obtain evidence, launch
investigations or prosecute suspects. Terre des Hommes set out to
actively tackle webcam child sex tourism by employing a virtual
10-year old Philippine girl named Sweetie, a so-called chatbot, to
identify offenders in chatrooms. Sweetie 1.0 could be deployed only
if police officers participated in chats, and thus was limited in
dealing with the large number of offenders. With this in mind, a
more pro-active and preventive approach was adopted to tackle the
issue. Sweetie 2.0 was developed with an automated chat function to
track, identify and deter individuals using the internet to
sexually abuse children. Using chatbots allows the monitoring of
larger parts of the internet to locate and identify (potential)
offenders, and to send them messages to warn of the legal
consequences should they proceed further. But using artificial
intelligence raises serious legal questions. For instance, is
sexually interacting with a virtual child actually a criminal
offence? How do rules of criminal procedure apply to Sweetie as
investigative software? Does using Sweetie 2.0 constitute
entrapment? This book, the outcome of a comparative law research
initiative by Leiden University's Center for Law and Digital
Technologies (eLaw) and the Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology,
and Society (TILT), addresses the application of substantive
criminal law and criminal procedure to Sweetie 2.0 within various
jurisdictions around the world. This book is especially relevant
for legislators and policy-makers, legal practitioners in criminal
law, and all lawyers and academics interested in internet-related
sexual offences and in Artificial Intelligence and law. Professor
Simone van der Hof is General Director of Research at t he Center
for Law and Digital Technologies (eLaw) of the Leiden Law School at
Leiden University, The Netherlands. Ilina Georgieva, LL.M., is a
PhD researcher at the Faculty of Governance and Global Affairs at
Leiden University, Bart Schermer is an associate professor at the
Center for Law and Digital Technologies (eLaw) of the Leiden Law
School, and Professor Bert-Jaap Koops is Professor of Regulation
and Technology at the Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology, and
Society (TILT), Tilburg University, The Netherlands.
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