ahlam1399
06-24-2016, 12:18 PM
NEW YORK: Smartphone users in the United States can try to help catch *** traffickers with a newly introduced app designed to identify hotel rooms where victims are held.
The app, TraffickCam, asks users to upload photos of hotel rooms where they may be staying and compares those to photos by law enforcement that depict suspected *** trafficking.
In the United States, the National Human Trafficking Resource Center said it got reports of more than 4,000 cases of *** trafficking last year.
There are ** reliable estimates of *** trafficking of mi**rs in the United States, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.
TraffickCam uses an algorithm that matches hotel rooms by comparing features such as carpeting, furniture and accessories.
One of its developers, Abby Stylia**u, a programming researcher at the University of Washington in St. Louis, said it was initially tested among heavy travelers, such as flight attendants, to amass photos.
The developers have assembled a trove of some 1.5 million photos of hotel rooms, she said.
So far, only the St. Louis County Police Department has been using it.
"Law enforcement is always looking for new and in**vative ways to recover victims, locate suspects and investigate criminal activity," said Sgt. Adam Kavanagh of the St. Louis County Police.
Stylia**u said she hoped TraffickCam could be used as evidence against traffickers but ack**wledged its limits.
"We're a silver bullet perhaps for a very, very small problem," she said. "All of trafficking isn't happening in hotel rooms."
http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/com/YEor/~4/RjD2C7j7HzM
أكثر... (http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/com/YEor/~3/RjD2C7j7HzM/130372-New-app-asks-users-fight-***-trafficking-snapping-photos)
The app, TraffickCam, asks users to upload photos of hotel rooms where they may be staying and compares those to photos by law enforcement that depict suspected *** trafficking.
In the United States, the National Human Trafficking Resource Center said it got reports of more than 4,000 cases of *** trafficking last year.
There are ** reliable estimates of *** trafficking of mi**rs in the United States, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.
TraffickCam uses an algorithm that matches hotel rooms by comparing features such as carpeting, furniture and accessories.
One of its developers, Abby Stylia**u, a programming researcher at the University of Washington in St. Louis, said it was initially tested among heavy travelers, such as flight attendants, to amass photos.
The developers have assembled a trove of some 1.5 million photos of hotel rooms, she said.
So far, only the St. Louis County Police Department has been using it.
"Law enforcement is always looking for new and in**vative ways to recover victims, locate suspects and investigate criminal activity," said Sgt. Adam Kavanagh of the St. Louis County Police.
Stylia**u said she hoped TraffickCam could be used as evidence against traffickers but ack**wledged its limits.
"We're a silver bullet perhaps for a very, very small problem," she said. "All of trafficking isn't happening in hotel rooms."
http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/com/YEor/~4/RjD2C7j7HzM
أكثر... (http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/com/YEor/~3/RjD2C7j7HzM/130372-New-app-asks-users-fight-***-trafficking-snapping-photos)