Man arrested after Microsoft finds child porn on OneDrive account

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Exterminator

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Earlier this week, we reported that Google had reported an individual to the police after discovering a large quantity of child abuse images on his Gmail account. After the police obtained a search warrant, they found a considerable stash of similar content on his home computer, and the person was arrested.

While the capture of such an individual is certainly cause for celebration, some have raised concerns about tech companies like Google intruding on the privacy of users, leading the company to defend its actions, clarifying that its inbox scanning is specifically tuned to identify content that may be related to child abuse.

But Google isn't the only company to use methods such as these. Details have now emerged of Microsoft also having identified someone that was sharing child abuse images in recent days, as BBC News reports.

screen_shot_2014-06-03_at_1.11.54_pm_story.jpg


Microsoft found an image involving a "young girl" that had allegedly been saved to a OneDrive account belonging to a man in his twenties from Pennsylvania. The man was later discovered to be trying to send two illegal images from a Microsoft live.com email address.

He was arrested on July 31 after Microsoft contacted the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children's CyberTipline - the same process that Google used - which then referred details of the company's findings to the police. He will appear in court next week. According to the affidavit detailing his case, the man reportedly admitted to having got hold of the pictures through chat app Kik Messenger, and to "trading and receiving images of child pornography on his mobile cellular device."

Pennsylvania State Police confirmed that Microsoft's actions had prompted the investigation, and acknowledged the details of the leaked affidavit.

Microsoft's terms and conditions of use for its services unambiguously state that it has the right to employ "automated technologies to detect child pornography or abusive behavior that might harm the system, our customers, or others."

Microsoft routinely uses PhotoDNA, a technology that it developed five years ago, as part of this effort. Mark Lamb, from Microsoft's Digital Crimes Unit, explained that PhotoDNA helps to "disrupt the spread of exploitative images of children, which we report to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, as required by law."

Microsoft has made this technology available to other software companies as well, including Google, which uses it alongside its own algorithms and tools to help crack down on images of child abuse. Facebook and Twitter are among other companies that also use PhotoDNA in their services.

While there are certainly compelling arguments to be made about privacy, the point must surely be made that actions such as those taken by Google and Microsoft in recent days are those of responsible companies doing what it takes to identify people sharing such imagery. Do you think tech companies are right to take these actions? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Source: BBC News | image via Microsoft
 

Kate_L

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I wonder ... how did they find this "videos" ?
What is this "automated technologie" ?

Why should people use that service if Microsoft is spying the users, what if I post some source code from my software, is my company safe anymore ?
 
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Jack

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This is surely one of these times when we should be glad that privacy is not respected..... The bad part from all this is that this perverts now know about this, so they will most likely stop using these services ... Maybe this detection technique should have been kept private...
As far as I know, Google (and the other companies) scan your email and their other services to find keywords that could that be used for target advertisement.... So privacy, is not a word that the Internet knows.. : P



I wonder ... how did they find this "videos" ?
What is this "automated technologie" ?


Here is a good article - http://techcrunch.com/2014/08/06/wh...t-for-child-porn-was-not-a-privacy-violation/



PhotoDNA Automates Child Abuse Image Detection
Here’s how it works:

Microsoft’s “PhotoDNA” technology is all about making it so that these specific types of illegal images can be automatically identified by computer programs, not people. (That’s an awful and psychologically draining job, after all.)

PhotoDNA converts an image into a common black-and-white format and size the image to a uniform size, Microsoft explained last year while announcing its increased efforts at collaborating with Google to combat online child abuse.

The technology then divides the image into squares and assigns a numerical value that represents the unique shading found within each square. Combined, those numerical values represent the “PhotoDNA signature” of an image file. That unique signature can then be used in comparison with other images online.

photodnacreatesimage_page.png


Microsoft today uses the technology on Bing, Outlook.com and its cloud storage service to identify child abuse images and stop them from being redistributed online.

The technology itself grew out of a partnership between Microsoft, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) and Dartmouth College. And in 2009, Microsoft also donated PhotoDNA to NCMEC to aid in the fight against child exploitation.

totheviewerseyetwoi_page.jpg


When Microsoft finds an image signature match, it reports it to NCMEC in the U.S., or, in the U.K., those reports go to CEOP (Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre). In 2012, Microsoft also began partnering with others, including law enforcement, to integrate PhotoDNA into tools used in child abuse investigations like Netclean Analyze, software often used by Swedish law enforcement agencies.

In addition, the International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children also has a program underway with various law enforcement agencies known as “Project Vic”, which uses PhotoDNA to help law enforcement automatically sift through the massive number of images in their child sexual exploitation investigations to ID new criminals.
 

Nico@FMA

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Its good to see that a pervert is being caught.
Yet it does not exclude that MS is snooping your data using a law enforcement inspired tool.
Because yes the pictures with child porn can be found using the tool.
Try uploading a detailed map where you blow up the Pentagon or a letter to some friend where you say that Obama is a tiran.
Do not surprised to see that you end up on the no fly list.

A dutch crime investigator has ones done a test to see how the NSA/MS/GOOGLE monitoring works.
He sended 2 emails to accounts he both owned. One he said that he was going to attack the US president en the next email he wrote when and where and that it was a joke to see how good the systems work.
He got arrested the same day on request by US law enforcement here in the Netherlands and has been added to a no fly list for life, not to mention that his phone and Internet has been tapped as has been proven by a security firm who can investigate tapping and such.
Obviously it was a joke and the Dutch law enforcement has released him with a good laugh.
But if he ever enters US territory he will face up to 20 years for conspiring a terror attack.

Just saying these tools are in one way great, the other way they are not so..
And while i applaud the capture of a pervert BUT i am increasingly get more annoyed with the spy tactics used.
So while offtopic i would say lets put the US on a no fly list and ban them from the net, after all if less then 350 million people, So if they can dictate the world, then i am sure they do not mind if nearly 6 billion people do the same to that small group of 350m US citizens. Then neither side has to worry about monitoring. As last time i checked i still was a dutch guy and not a US citizen (for god sake lol)
Looooooooool.

<ROFL>
 
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Tony Cole

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I agree 100% with Jake, in these circumstances people who commit terrible crimes against children, or terrorism should be caught and all powers possible to enable such surveillance on everyone. I always say, if you have nothing to hide, then you have nothing to fear
 
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