Sweetie 2.0 : using artificial intelligence to fight webcam child sex tourism / Simone van der Hof, Ilina Georgieva, Bart Schermer, Bert-Jaap Koops, editors.
2019
K5293 .S94 2019 (Mapit)
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Details
Title
Sweetie 2.0 : using artificial intelligence to fight webcam child sex tourism / Simone van der Hof, Ilina Georgieva, Bart Schermer, Bert-Jaap Koops, editors.
Added Author
Imprint
The Hague : Asser Press, [2019]
Copyright
©2019
Description
xvi, 542 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm.
Series
Information technology & law series ; 31.
Formatted Contents Note
Legal aspects of Sweetie 2.0 / Bart Schermer, Ilina Georgieva, Simone van der Hof and Bert-Jaap Koops
Sexual-orientated online chat conversations - characteristics and testing pathways of online perpetrators / Manon Kleijn and Stefan Bogaerts
Sweetie 2.0 technology: technical challenges of making the Sweetie 2.0 Chatbot / Hans Henseler and Rens de Wolf
Substantive and procedural legislation in Belgium to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Sofie Royer, Charlotte Conings and Gaëller Marlier
Substantive and procedural legislation in the Republic of Croatia to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Ines Bojić and Zvjezdana Kuprešak
Substantive and procedural legislation in England and Wales to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Alisdair A Gillespie
Substantive and procedural legislation in Estonia to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Kaspar Kala
Substantive and procedural legislation in Israel to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Asaf Harduf
Substantive and procedural legislation in the Netherlands to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Bart W. Schermer, Bert-Jaap Koops and Simone van er Hof
Substantive and procedural legislation in the Philippines to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Michael Anthony C. Dizon
Substantive and procedural legislation in the United States of America to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Jonathan Unikowski
Sexual-orientated online chat conversations - characteristics and testing pathways of online perpetrators / Manon Kleijn and Stefan Bogaerts
Sweetie 2.0 technology: technical challenges of making the Sweetie 2.0 Chatbot / Hans Henseler and Rens de Wolf
Substantive and procedural legislation in Belgium to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Sofie Royer, Charlotte Conings and Gaëller Marlier
Substantive and procedural legislation in the Republic of Croatia to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Ines Bojić and Zvjezdana Kuprešak
Substantive and procedural legislation in England and Wales to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Alisdair A Gillespie
Substantive and procedural legislation in Estonia to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Kaspar Kala
Substantive and procedural legislation in Israel to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Asaf Harduf
Substantive and procedural legislation in the Netherlands to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Bart W. Schermer, Bert-Jaap Koops and Simone van er Hof
Substantive and procedural legislation in the Philippines to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Michael Anthony C. Dizon
Substantive and procedural legislation in the United States of America to combat webcam-related child sexual abuse / Jonathan Unikowski
Summary
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. 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.
Note
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. 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.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references.
Call Number
K5293 .S94 2019
Language
English
ISBN
9789462652873 (hardback)
9462652872 (hardback)
9462652872 (hardback)
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