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Web crawler targets child exploitation

November 30, 2011
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By Marianne Meadahl

Researchers at SFU’s International Cybercrime Research Centre hope a tool they’ve developed to track websites that exploit children can help police better investigate the crime.

A web crawler developed by criminology PhD student Richard Frank allows researchers to collect massive samples—more than 200,000 web pages at a time—while keeping researchers safe from viewing the content.

In their latest study researchers analyzed how the networks are structured and applied various “attack” strategies to determine which would cause the most disruption to such networks.

Frank, who already has a PhD in computing science from SFU, says attack strategies are aimed at those websites that combine two important characteristics.

“One is exposure to the public, measured as the number of incoming web links to a given site, and the other (is) content severity, measured by a scale of the gravity of the images or simply the text found on a website.

“Eventually we hope to understand the life cycle of a website hosting this type of content: when it is created, what content is put on it, how content shifts from one website to another, and how it 'dies'.”

Frank, with project supervisor Martin Bouchard and researchers Bryce Westlake and Kila Joffres, earned an honorable mention at a recent European informatics conference for their paper Strategies to Disrupt Online Child Porn Networks.

Joffres will now focus on using the web crawler on terrorism websites.

The project is one of several underway at the cybercrime centre established in 2008 and now based at the Surrey campus’ new Podium 2 facility.

To read the European conference paper, visit http://at.sfu.ca/TspXaA.

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