Partner With Us
























Microsoft Tech Helps Nix Illicit Child Images

PhotoDNA aids researchers and child safety advocates in hunting down exploitative images on the Web.

December 17, 2009
By Stuart J. Johnston: More stories by this author:

Advanced image recognition is at the heart of a new initiative by Microsoft and researchers at Dartmouth to help identify and remove child-exploitation pictures online. eSecurity Planet has the story.


A team of computer scientists from Microsoft and Dartmouth College, along with the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC), have come up with a way to automate the detection and location of child pornography on the Internet.

Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), which initially developed the technology, is donating what it calls PhotoDNA to NCMEC to help it root out images of children being sexually abused by predators -- and to get them off the Web.

Representatives of all three bodies made the announcement Wednesday in a conference call with members of the press.

Scientists at the software giant's Microsoft Research (MSR) division first created PhotoDNA, which underwent later refinement with help from Hany Farid, a digital forensics expert and professor of computer science at Dartmouth.

Read the full story at eSecurity Planet:
Microsoft Helps Root Out Child Exploitation Images Online


TAGS: Microsoft, research, child safety




Security Archives | 7 Day InternetNews Summary | Contact Stuart J. Johnston | Back to top

Add internetnews.com
to your browser search box.

IE 7 | Firefox 2.0 | Firefox 1.5.x
Receive news
via our XML/RSS:
feed



More InternetNews.com


Hardware Software Mobility Web Content
Search Government Developer Business
Storage E-Commerce Networking Security




The Network for Technology Professionals

Search:

About Internet.com

Legal Notices, Licensing, Permissions, Privacy Policy.
Advertise | Newsletters | E-mail Offers