Author: Jane Edwards|| Date Published: November 12, 2024
Jeff Tiegs, president and founder of Skull Games, discussed how open source intelligence, or OSINT, and military veterans’ intelligence skills could help law enforcement agencies address the problem of commercial sex trafficking.
In an article published on Carahsoft.com, Tiegs cited how a nonprofit organization like Skull Games harnesses OSINT to help “identify women and children who are being trafficked and identify their exploiters.”
“We package up all that information and send it to our law enforcement partners for action,” he added.
The company executive explained how Skull Games’ Survivor-Hunter program supports women who have survived sex trafficking.
“We teach them about OSINT, and they use their knowledge from inside from industry to hunt alongside us, which gives them a sense of empowerment and healing,” he noted.
Tiegs noted that his organization leverages the analytical expertise of military veterans to help break the code that sex traffickers use.
“Once we know the acronyms and the emojis and the way they speak, we are able to unravel who’s doing what, why, when and where, and we can share all that information with law enforcement,” he added.
Textron Aviation Defense has been awarded a five-year, $150 million contract to provide sustaining engineering and program management, or SEPM, services…
Merlin, an aerospace and defense technology company, has appointed former PsiQuantum executive Mark Brunner as chief revenue officer. What Will Mark Brunner Oversee?…
Fortreum has acquired Kovr.AI, an AI-native cybersecurity compliance platform, to combine automated compliance capabilities with independent assessment services for federal…