This Chatbot Catches Pedophiles
from the technology-on-the-prowl dept
We've written about kids teaching FBI agents how to chat online like teens to help catch unlike predators, and about how chat-bots are fooling lots of people - especially when they're expecting something specifically. It sounds like someone has put the two ideas together, and has created a chatbot that tries to catch pedophiles. It goes into chat rooms and starts talking like an ordinary teen, but looks for classic symbols of an adult predator looking to find a child. If the chatbot suspects something is up, it sends an email to the bots creator with the relevant transcript. He then reads the transcript to see if the situation looks suspicious, and will then contact local police with all the info. He calls the various bots ChatNannies, and claims no one has figured it out and that it's helped with police investigations (though, there's no proof of either of these claims). As for staying relevant, the chatbot apparently tries to learn from the conversations it's involved with, as well as surfing the web for other pop culture information. The article also includes a "sample chat" that seems fairly sophisticated for a bot - which actually makes me wonder how true it really is - though, I have kept up with the state of the art in chatbots lately. Are they really that sophisticated?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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sophisticated
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And then...?
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whats " proof " Mike ?
It's not even a human !
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Re: And then...?
You don't really think your words vanish off into cyberspace when they roll off the chat window do you? ;-)
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In this technique, the bot joins as person Alice on network A.NET, and as person Betty on a different network, B.NET. It picks a real unrelated participant on A.NET (we'll call Annie) and parrots most of Annie's speech on B.NET, so Betty says whatever Annie says. It likewise picks a random participant Bernice from B.NET and parrots most of Bernice's speech as Alice on A.NET.
Once this blind is constructed, either Alice or Betty can add additional comments to goad conversations from their respective chat groups. If the bots detect directed questions, like "alice, a/s/l?" it can respond directly according to the bot's goals, or it can just funnel the question to the alter-ego on the other network to fetch a genuinely produced reply from the real Bernice.
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