Child Exploitation Tracking System - About The CETS Partnership

About The CETS Partnership

In 2003 Detective Sergeant Paul Gillespie, Officer in Charge of the Child Exploitation Section of the Toronto Police Service's Sex Crimes Unit, made a request directly to Bill Gates, CEO and Chief Architect at Microsoft at the time, for assistance with these types of crimes reference: RCMP Background Due to the nature of these crimes, the response and commitment from Microsoft was a quick, emotional one. Agencies experienced in tracking and apprehending those who perpetrate such crimes were involved in the design, implementation, and policy. The solution needed to assist law enforcement agencies from the initial point of detection, through the investigative phase, to arrest, prosecution, and conviction of the criminal. In addition, it was imperative that the solution adhered to existing rights and civil liberties of the citizens of the various countries. This included remaining independent of Internet traffic and any individual user’s computer. Finally, such a solution needed to be global in nature and enable collaboration among nations and agencies. In order to increase the effectiveness of investigators worldwide, such a system would allow law enforcement entities to:

  • Collect evidence of online child exploitation gathered by multiple law enforcement agencies.
  • Organize and store the information safely and securely.
  • Search the database of information.
  • Securely share the information with other agencies, across jurisdictions.
  • Analyze the information and provide pertinent matches.
  • Adhere to global software industry standards.

Microsoft has published a detailed marketing and promotional piece that provides a non-critical overview of this effort: About The Microsoft Child Exploitation Tracking System. A complicating factor across many technology based solutions, the issues and limitations of the CETS software solution are not due to constraints of technology but rather to issues in political/business policies and processes . There is generally inadequate cooperation, communication, and coordination across jurisdictional, law enforcement agency, and political/country boundaries. Microsoft has been an important technology leader in this arena; however, no single Law Enforcement body has demonstrated effective leadership, vision, or ability to address the non-technical challenges facing global/international crimes on the Internet. CETS deployments are truly only useful if they aggregate and share information across organizational and political boundaries. Crimes against children on the Internet span all manner of political and geographical boundaries; to date, all CETS deployments are stand alone systems isolated within their own country (at best) and their own organization (at worst). Law Enforcement investigators generally still communicate among one another through informal channels – many keep in touch through informal Facebook associations, email, and phone (actual voice). The CETS tool has been deployed without a strategy to share data among Law Enforcement and some instances of CETS are used as case/file management tool only and not for the intended advanced sharing and image analytics. In many instances, CETS is deployed where a much more cost effective tool and process could be. The fanfare of high-end technology launches and Microsoft-sponsored marketing/public relations events where CEO Steve Ballmer signs partnership agreements with a political official have grown stale and ring hollow. Many front line investigators stoically worry that limited resources siphoned away for CETS could better serve the front line police work in some other way to solve crimes against children worldwide.

Microsoft has led the deployment of CETS across the globe The breadth approach (many deployments) in which Microsoft is engaged rather than targeted approach (fewer/central) may evidence this fact. The costs of these deployments and tool development are also problematic. Microsoft has invested in excess of USD 12 Million in developing and deploying the tool with extremely short-sighted attempts at a long-term sustainability strategy to support the extant community worldwide. Since CETS is a "shared cost" tool, the recipient Law Enforcement Agency must absorb a share of the costs for deployment and they must sign and pay for a premier service contract with Microsoft. So the overall costs to Law Enforcement worldwide are proportional. The underlying Microsoft business strategy has been to introduce the "premier service offerings" on a smaller scale in order to expand its customer base.

There are no public numbers on the cost/benefit of CETS to Microsoft sales; however, deployments are only increasing, as are costs, and marketing returns are said to be down. CETS has been labeled by "some" senior Microsoft managers and executives as Old News.

Read more about this topic:  Child Exploitation Tracking System

Famous quotes containing the word partnership:

    Nevertheless, no school can work well for children if parents and teachers do not act in partnership on behalf of the children’s best interests. Parents have every right to understand what is happening to their children at school, and teachers have the responsibility to share that information without prejudicial judgment.... Such communication, which can only be in a child’s interest, is not possible without mutual trust between parent and teacher.
    Dorothy H. Cohen (20th century)