Social networking video site
Clipstar
has deployed a technology designed to protect young people from online
paedophiles and bullies.
The Anti-Grooming Engine, developed by
Crisp
Thinking, analyses the content and context of online chat to identify
potentially dangerous grooming and bullying conversations.
Several child safety groups have expressed concern over the increasing use of
social networks by children, urging sites to do more to protect them.
The
Child
Exploitation and Online Protection Centre launched its
Think
U Know awareness site in October which allows children to meet and learn
about different
aspects of
online safety.
Some social networking sites, such as
MySpace,
use protocols to pick up key phrases to spot underage users, but Crisp Thinking
believes that they do not search for potential abusers targeting young people.
The Anti-Grooming Engine monitors how relationships develop and looks for
underlying patterns used to manipulate young people, alerting moderators so that
action can be taken.
"Social networking websites have been run like the Wild West with no one
pro-actively taking responsibility for protecting users against the threat of
abuse," said Adam Hildreth, founder of Crisp Thinking.
"Groomers can be very devious and adults naturally use many diverse and
complex words, punctuation and grammar in written conversation.
"The Anti-Grooming Engine measures many variables such and can understand the
overall picture to read between the lines."
The programme also creates a 'digital fingerprint' that is matched to known
'good' and 'bad' online relationships which are stored in its databases.
"Employing the Anti-Grooming Engine sends a clear message to groomers that
our site will not tolerate attempts to make contact with young people," said
Eren Ozagir, sales and marketing director at Clipstar.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article