Direct > Data & Technology

CONFESSIONS OF A PREDATOR

DAVID&GOLIATH, Los Angeles / CHILD RESCUE COALITION / 2023

Awards:

Shortlisted Cannes Lions
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Overview

Credits

Overview

Why is this work relevant for Direct?

“Confessions of a Predator” is a highly targeted campaign turning child predators into their own whistleblowers using their own data against them in real time. Child Rescue Coalition’s (CRC) technology identifies predators in the moment they share child sexual abuse material (CSAM). We transformed captured predator activity into real-time email confessions from the predator to the legislators with the power to catch them. In this targeted approach, legislators received local predator leads they had the power to act on, and the ability to reply directly to the confession to begin a relationship with CRC and save future children from abuse.

Background

There are more than 500,000+ child predators online every day, according to FBI data. Child predators have access to CSAM due to the easy, anonymous, and on-demand availability of these illicit graphic images and videos of child victims — with an alarming 85% of online predators also committing hands-on abuse. To fight this crisis, Child Rescue Coalition (CRC) built technology that detects sharing of CSAM in real time. In the hands of law enforcement, it can be used to identify, locate, and arrest predators. But too often, police departments lack the resources to adopt the free technology and act on it. Lawmakers routinely neglect the crisis of CSAM, avoiding it entirely or making goodwill gestures without allocating funds to address the immense problem of CSAM. We needed to make the invisible problem of CSAM visible to the lawmakers who hold the power to make real change possible.

Describe the creative idea

“Confessions of a Predator” is a first-of-its-kind, real-time demonstration of Child Rescue Coalition’s (CRC) predator identification technology, transforming data into a confession to the legislators with the power to fight them. Through the creation of a proprietary mailing intelligence system, every time a predator shared child sexual abuse material (CSAM) an email was automatically triggered from the predator confessing their own crimes with their file names, time stamp, and location. The confession was directed to their local legislators in real time, providing a real lead and a proven and free solution to fight it—CRC’s free technology. Legislators were empowered to take action by replying right to the email in their inbox to learn how they could use their influence to allocate resources to protect the children in their area.

Describe the strategy

On average, Child Rescue Coalition (CRC) identifies 27,000 records a minute relating to the trade of child sexual abuse material (CSAM), with 78% depicting children under 12. Yet, a New York Times exposé wrote “...state lawmakers…have refused to discuss the problem in detail, or have avoided attending meetings and hearings when it was on the agenda.” Legislators with the power to rescue children were, at best, unaware of the problem, or at worst actively avoiding it. The sheer enormity of the crisis caused retreat—the issue was out of sight and out of mind. Our strategy was built on the principles of psychic numbing—feeling indifferent to the suffering of large quantities of people—and salience. We needed to bring the data to life ONE case at a time and to put the crisis in front of the legislators who avoided it and urge them to allocate proper resources to fight it.

Describe the execution

“Confessions of a Predator” launched during National Child Abuse Prevention Month, targeting the legislator inboxes of the 10 states leading in number of predators. We created email templates pulling in real-time predator data, transforming their activity logged into 842 email leads. In each confession, legislators could reply directly to learn how they could adopt Child Rescue Coalition’s free technology. Additionally:

- To create public awareness and accountability, we seeded the campaign with local and national news outlets, and posted regular social media reminders for legislators to check their inboxes.

- A campaign video was created for social media to educate the public on the crisis of child sexual abuse material, inform them of our efforts and urge them to write their own emails to local legislators and urge them to #adoptCRCTech.

- A Change.org campaign also grew awareness of the issue and public demand for adoption of CRC technology.

List the results

“Confessions of a Predator” transformed hidden predator behavior across 10 states into 842 criminal leads included in the letters showed the scale of the problem to legislators. Each lead was sent to multiple key legislators, resulting in 24,452 appeals to fight the crisis of child sexual abuse material (CSAM). Although our audience of legislators has historically avoided CSAM, the open email rate on launch day was 30%, surpassing industry benchmarks by 50%. “Confessions of a Predator” launched on April 11th. As of April 20th, 11 predator investigations have been initiated and more will follow. For every predator arrested, CRC estimates 50-150 of their future victims rescued. If these investigations reach fruition, up to 1,650 future child sexual abuse victims will be rescued.

Describe the use of data, or how the data enhanced the campaign output

Child Rescue Coalition’s (CRC) technology identifies predators in the moment they share child sexual abuse material (CSAM), but that data was largely unknown by our target audience. “Confessions of a Predator” is the reimagining of real child predator data—a first-of its-kind, data-centric campaign that transformed data capture into confessions from predators themselves in real time. The emailed confessions shared the real data, such as file names shared (email excerpt: Today at 8:00PM…I shared a file named “PTHC [REDACTED] little girls 9yo 10yo 12yo.mp4”). The experience of reading real predator data, triggered in real time, created a powerful wake-up call—something that can no longer go unnoticed for our target audience of legislators. In the closing of every predator’s email confession, we pointed the lawmaker to reply directly to the email to begin a conversation with CRC and use their power to protect children.

Is there any cultural context that would help the jury understand how this work was perceived by people in the country where it ran?

The Internet has created an explosion in child sexual abuse material (CSAM). Child predators have infinite access to CSAM due to the easy, anonymous, and on-demand availability of these illicit graphic images and videos of child victims. Each individual file of CSAM documents a crime, and possession is a felony. Social media platforms have a primary role in facilitating the spread of CSAM, but lack regulation to monitor it. Platforms deflect responsibility, and prioritization of privacy enables predators to share material and educate new predators under the cloak of encryption. Social platforms should take responsibility for enabling predators, but with an alarming 85% of online predators also committing hands-on sexual abuse, there’s no time to wait for platforms to act. It falls on lawmakers to allocate the resources for law enforcement to curb the exponential spread of CSAM and identify and arrest child sexual predators to prevent further abuse.

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