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Monday, November 07, 2022

"In the research, I found that it's very vast, and I won't quote numbers because the numbers are relatively hypothetical, but it's in the millions of kids that are being sexually abused. So we found out that 70% plus of the transactions for this material were happening online. So taking the same tactics that companies take to identify spam and malware and remove it to identifying and removing any child sexual abuse material from the internet..."

 

Kutcher grew up as a Roman Catholic. As an adult, he practices Kabbalah, and has visited Israel and studied the Torah; his wife Mila Kunis stated that he "taught [me] everything I never knew" about her religion, Judaism, though as of 2018, he has not converted.[75][76][77] On trips to Israel, Kutcher visited Kabbalah centers in Tel Aviv and in Tsfat.[76] In 2013, Kutcher remarked, "Israel is near and dear to my heart ... coming to Israel is sort of coming back to the source of creation – trying to get closer to that. And as a creative person, going to the source of creation is really inspiring. And this place has been really inspiring for me – not only on a spiritual level, but also on an artistic and creative level."[78]

 

Welcome Paul,

Thank you for joining our community.

We're especially honored and happy you're here. Together, we have a lot of work to be done.  We appreciate your work and expertise in this area. 

Your readers can expect updates on the issue, milestones in Thorn's mission, insights into what we and our partners are doing to end the sexual exploitation of children online, and how your readers can support it all.

We encourage your readers to watch the videos on our site featuring key moments in our history. 

Talk soon,

 Ashton

Co-founder Ashton Kutcher

shares his experiences with the United States Senate.

CEO Julie Cordua

explains our mission to eliminate CSAM.

We are building the tools to end online child sexual abuse. With your support, we can defend every child.

 Ashton Kutcher: It's not like anything I've done before in my own life. And really just kind of just a test of my own mettle to ensure that I sort of regain my own personal physical dominance. My non-profit Thorn reached out and said that they had 100 passes for the marathon to raise awareness. We build software to fight against the sexual exploitation of children, so we help companies and law enforcement identify kids that are being sexually abused online—today we've identified 25,000 kids that are being abused. And we keep going and we keep building more new software because the landscape online keeps changing.

So about 15 years ago, I saw this Dateline special about these kids that were like five, six, seven years old in Cambodia, that grown-ass men were flying to Cambodia to assault these kids and somebody was profiting off of it. And I thought this was crazy. I can't believe this exists in the world. I started looking around, trying to find what the organizations were that were proactively going after that issue, and there were some small organizations that were doing some stuff but nothing at any kind of scale. I just started to approach it the same way I look at startups, because at the time I was investing in a lot of startups. I thought the first thing I need to do is figure out what the total addressable market is here, how big is this problem? And I spent about five years researching the problem to try to size it, and at one point somebody said to me, this isn't a problem just for Cambodia—this is a problem here [in the United States]. This is happening here.

In the research, I found that it's very vast, and I won't quote numbers because the numbers are relatively hypothetical, but it's in the millions of kids that are being sexually abused. So we found out that 70% plus of the transactions for this material were happening online. I thought If we can build companies that are good businesses online, maybe we can make [sexual explotation] a bad business by identifying this content. So taking the same tactics that companies take to identify spam and malware and remove it to identifying and removing a child sexual abuse material from the internet.

So right now we have three core pieces of software that are all identifying children that are being sexually abused. There are two products that we have for law enforcement to help them prioritize their caseload and find these kids and collaborate on cases, and that's been used around the world by law enforcement and in all 50 states. And then we have a new product that we just finished building a couple of years ago, that's being used by enterprise companies like any company that has an upload button on their site where you can upload a photo, an image, or a video.

We can help them identify the content and report it and take it down. Today we've identified 25,000 kids, and every year that number gets greater. We've got a real problem on our hands and we now, thanks to the work of the folks at Thorn we've got some real solutions, and it's just about getting folks to implement those solutions and then staying one step ahead so a lot of the people that are consuming and publishing this content are really technologically sophisticated, so staying one step ahead of them and finding these kids is. That's what we do.

https://www.thorn.org/child-sexual-exploitation-and-technology/\

 

 TED TALK:

https://www.thorn.org/blog/two-years-after-ted-we-stand-at-a-critical-moment-in-the-fight-to-eliminate-csam/?utm_campaign=welcome%20email&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=215258442&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-95k4nyv8Eo7viij1txawrsG-ZZfDHM2zKXbySSrPMKyvtwKSPaEF4LdPUV98xhuAw85O31HlPCPpy1Gyu1XP5dMHX4OA&utm_source=Thorn%20email%20subscriber