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>> Narrator: Live from Las Vegas, it's theCUBE,
covering AWS re:Invent 2017, presented by AWS,
Intel, and our ecosystem of partners.
>> Hello everyone, welcome to a special
CUBE presentation here, live in Las Vegas for
Amazon Web Service's AWS re:Invent 2017.
This is theCUBE's fifth year here.
We've been watching the progression.
I'm John Furrier with Justin here as my co-host.
Our two next guests are Bob Rogers,
the chief data scientist at Intel,
and Julie Cardoa, who's the CEO of Thorn.
Great guests, showing some AI for good.
Intel, obviously, good citizen and great technology partner.
Welcome to theCUBE.
>> Thank you, thanks for having us!
>> So, I saw your talk you gave at
the Public Sector Breakfast this morning
here at re:Invent.
Packed house, fire marshal was kicking people out.
Really inspirational story.
Intel, we've talked at South by Southwest.
You guys are really doing a lot of AI for good.
That's the theme here.
You guys are doing incredible work.
>> Julie: Thank you.
>> Tell your story real quick.
>> Yeah, so Thorn is a nonprofit,
we started about five years ago,
and we are just specifically dedicated to build
new technologies to defend children form sexual abuse.
We were seeing that, as, you know,
new technologies emerge, there's new innovation out there,
how child sexual abuse was presenting itself
was changing dramatically.
So, everything from child sex trafficking online,
to the spread of child sexual abuse material,
livestreaming abuse, and there wasn't a concentrated effort
to put the best and brightest minds and technology together
to be a part of the solution,
and so that's what we do.
We build products to stop child abuse.
>> John: So you're a nonprofit?
>> Julie: Yep!
>> And you're in that public sector,
but you guys have made a great progress.
What's the story behind it?
How did you get to do so effective work
in such a short period of time as a nonprofit?
>> Well, I think there's a couple things to that.
One is, well, we learned a lot really quickly,
so what we're doing today is not what
we thought we would do five years ago.
We thought we were gonna talk to big companies,
and push them to do more,
and then we realized that we actually needed to be a hub.
We needed to build our own engineering teams,
we needed to build product,
and then bring in these companies to help us,
and to add to that,
but there had to be some there there,
and so we actually have evolved.
We're a nonprofit, but we are a product company.
We have two products used in 23 countries around the world,
stopping abuse every day.
And I think the other thing we learned is that
we really have to break down silos.
So, we didn't, in a lot of our development,
we didn't go the normal route of saying,
okay, well this is a law enforcement job,
so we're gonna go bid for a big government RFE.
We just went and built a tool and gave it
to a bunch of police officers and they said,
"Wow, this works really well,
"we're gonna keep using it."
And it kinda spread like wildfire.
>> And it's making a difference.
It's really been a great inspirational story.
Check out Thorn, amazing work,
real use case, in my mind, a testimonial for
how fast you can accelerate.
Congratulations.
Bob, I wanna get your take on this because
it's a data problem that, actually,
the technology's applying to a problem that
people have been trying to
crack the code on for a long time.
>> Yeah, well, it's interesting,
'cause the context is that we're really in this
era of AI explosion,
and AI is really computer systems that can do things
that only humans could do 10 years ago.
That's kind of my basic way of thinking about it,
so the problem of being able to recognize
when you're looking at two images of the same child,
which is the piece that we solved for Thorn,
actually, you know, is a great example of using
the current AI capabilities.
You start with the problem of,
if I show an algorithm two different images
of the same child, can it recognize that they're the same?
And you basically customize your training
to create a very specific capability.
Not a basic image recognition or facial recognition,
but a very specific capability
that's been trained with specific examples.
I was gonna say something about what
Julie was describing about their model.
Their model to create that there there
has been incredible because
it allows them to really focus our energy
into the right problems.
We have lots of technology,
we have lots of different ways of
doing AI and machine learning,
but when we get a focus on this is the data,
this is the exact problem we need to solve,
and this is the way it needs to work for law enforcement,
for National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
It has really just turned the knob up to 11, so to speak.
>> I mean, this is an example where, I mean,
we always talk about how tech transformation
can make things go faster.
It's such an obvious problem.
I mean, it's almost everyone kinda looks away
because it's too hard.
So, I wanna ask you, how do people make this happen
for other areas for good?
So, for instance, you know,
what was the bottlenecks before?
What solved the problem, because, I mean,
you could really make a difference here.
You guys are.
>> Well, I think there's a couple things.
I think you hit on one, which is
this is a problem people turn away from.
It's really hard to look at.
And the other thing is is
there's not a lot of money to be made
in using advanced technology to find
missing and exploited children, right?
So, it did require the development
of a nonprofit that said, "We're gonna do this,
"and we're gonna fundraise to get it done."
But it also required us to look at it
from a technology angle, right?
I think a lot of times people look at social issues
from the impact angle, which we do,
but we said, "What if we looked at it
"from a different perspective?
"How can technology disrupt in this area?"
And then we made that the core of what we do,
and we partnered with all the other
amazing organizations that are doing the other work.
And I think, then, what Bob said was that
we created a hub where other experts could plug into,
and I think, in any other issue area that you're working on,
you can't just talk about it and convene people.
You actually have to build, and when you build,
you create a platform that others can add to,
and I think that is one of the core reasons why
we have seen so much progress,
is we started out convening and really realized
that wasn't gonna last very long,
and then we built, and once we started building, we scaled.
>> So, you got in the market quickly with something.
>> Yeah.
>> So, one of the issues with
any sort of criminal enterprise
is it tends to end up in a bit of an arms race,
so you've built this great technology but then
you've gotta keep one step ahead of the bad guys.
So, how are you actually doing that?
How are you continuing to invest in this and develop it
to make sure that you're always one step ahead?
>> So, I can address that on a couple of levels.
One is, you know, working with Thorn,
and I lead a program at Intel called
the Safer Children Program, where we work with
Thorn and also the National Center
for Missing and Exploited Children.
Those conversations bring in all of the tech giants,
and there's a little bit of sibling rivalry.
We're all trying to throw in our best tech.
So, I think we all wanna do as well as we can
for these partnerships.
The other thing is, just in very tactical terms,
working with Thorn, we've actually,
Thorn and with Microsoft, we've created a capability
to crowdsource more data
to help improve the accuracy
of these deep learning algorithms.
So, by getting critical mass around this problem,
we've actually now created enough visibility
that we're getting more and more data.
And as you said earlier, it's a data problem,
so if you have enough data,
you can actually create the models with the accuracy
and the capability that you need.
So, it starts to feed on itself.
>> Julie talked about the business logic,
how she attacked that.
That's really, 'cause I think one thing notable,
good use case, but from a tech perspective,
how does the cloud fit in with Intel specifically?
Because it really, the cloud is an enabler too.
>> Bob: Yeah, absolutely.
>> How's that all working with Intel?
And you go on about whole new territory
you guys are forging in here, it's awesome, but the cloud.
>> Right, so, for us, the cloud is
an incredible way for us to make our compute capability
available to anyone who needs to do computing,
especially in this data-driven algorithm era where
more and more machine learning, more and more AI,
more and more data-driven problems
are coming to the fore,
doing that work on the cloud and being able to
scale your work according to how much data
is coming in at any time,
it makes the cloud a really natural place for us.
And of course, Intel's hardware is a
core component of pretty much all the cloud
that you could connect to.
>> And the compute that you guys provide,
and Amazon adds to it, their cloud is impressive.
Now, I'd like to know what you guys
are gonna be talking about in your session.
You have a session here at re:Invent.
What's the title of the session, what's the agenda,
is it the same stuff here, what's gonna be talked about?
>> So, we're talking about life-changing AI applications,
and in specific we're gonna talk about,
at the end Julie will talk about
what Thorn has done with the child-finder and the AI
that we and Microsoft built for them.
We'll also, I'll start out by talking about
Intel's role broadly in the computing and AI space.
Intel really looks to take all of its different hardware,
and networking, and memory assets,
and make it possible for anybody to do the kinds of
artificial intelligence or machine learning
they need to do.
And then in the middle, there's a really cool
deployment on AWS sandwich that (something)
will talk about how they've taken the models
and really dialed them up in terms of
how fast you can go through this data,
so that we can go through millions and millions of images
in our searches, and come back with results
really, really fast.
So, it's a great sort of three piece story about
the conception of AI, the deployment at scale
and with high performance,
and then how Thorn is really taking that
and creating a human impact around it.
>> So, Bob, I asked you the Intel question because
no one calls up Intel and says,
"Hey, give me some AI for good."
I mean, I wish that would be the case.
>> Well, they do now.
>> If they do, well, share your strategy,
because cloud makes sense.
I could see how you could provision easily,
get in there, really empowering people
to do stuff that's passionable and relevant.
But how do you guys play in all of this?
'Cause I know you supply stuff to the cloud guys.
Is this a formal program you're doing at Intel?
Is this a one-off?
>> Yeah, so Safer Children is a formal program.
It started with two other folks,
Lisa Davis and Lisa Theinai,
going to the VP of the entire data center group and saying,
"There is an opportunity to make a big impact
"with Intel technology, and we'd like to do this."
And it started literally because
Intel does actually want to do good work for humankind,
and frankly, the fact that these people
are using our technology and other technology
to hurt children, it steams our dumplings, frankly.
So, it started with that.
>> You've been a team player with Amazon and everyone else.
>> Exactly, so then, once we've been able to show
that we can actually create technology
and provide infrastructure to solve these problems,
it starts to become a self-fulfilling prophecy
where people are saying, "Hey, we've got this
"interesting adjacent problem that
"this kind of technology could solve.
"Is there an opportunity to work together and solve that?"
And that fits into our bigger, you know,
people ask me all the time,
"Why does Intel have a chief data scientist?"
We're a hardware company, right?
The answer is--
>> That processes a lot of data!
>> Yes, that processes a lot of data.
Literally, we need to help people know
how to get value from their data.
So, if people are successful
with their analytics and their AI,
guess what, they're gonna invest in their infrastructure,
and it sort of lifts Intel's boat across the board.
>> You guys have always been a great citizen,
and great technology provider,
and hats off to Intel.
Julie, tell a story about an example
people can get a feel for some of the impact,
because I saw you on stage this morning
with Theresa Carlson, and we've been tracking
her efforts in the public sector have been amazing,
and Intel's been part of that too, congratulations.
But you were kind of emotional,
and you got a lot of applause.
What's some of the impact?
Tell a story of how important this really is,
and your work at Thorn.
>> Yeah, well, I mean, one of the
areas we work in is trying to identify children
who are being sold online in the US.
A lot of people, first of all, think
that's happening somewhere else.
No, that's here in this country.
A lot of these kids are coming out of foster care,
or are runaways, and they get convinced
by a pimp or a trafficker to be sold
into prostitution, basically.
So, we have 150,000 escort ads
posted every single day in this country,
and somewhere in there are children,
and it's really difficult to
look through that with your eye,
and determine what's a child.
So, we built a tool called Spotlight
that basically reads and analyzes
every ad as it comes in,
and we layer on smart algorithms to say to an officer,
"Hey, this is an ad you need to pay attention to.
"It looks like this could be a child."
And we've had over 6,000 children
identified over the last year.
>> John: That's amazing.
>> You know, it happens in a situation where,
you know, you have online it says,
you know, this girl's 18, and it's actually
a 15-year-old girl who met a man who
said he was 17, he was actually 30,
had already been convicted of sex trafficking,
and within 48 hours of meeting this girl,
he had her up online for sale.
So, that sounds like a unique incident.
It is not unique, it happens every single day
in almost every city and town across this country.
And the work we're doing is to find those kids faster,
and stop that trauma.
>> Well, I just wanna say congratulations.
That's great work.
We had a CUBE alumni, founder of CloudAir,
Jeff Hammerbacher, good friend of theCUBE.
He had a famous quote that he said on theCUBE,
then said on the Charlie Rose Show,
"The best minds of our generations
"are thinking about how to make people click ads.
"That sucks."
This is an example where you can really
put the best minds on some of the real important things.
>> Yeah, we love Jeff.
I read that quote all the time.
>> It's really a most important quote.
Well, thanks so much.
Congratulations, great inspiration, great story.
Bob, thanks for coming on, appreciate it.
CUBE live coverage here at AWS re:Invent 2017,
kicking off day one of three days
of wall-to-wall coverage here, live in Las Vegas.
We'll be right back with more
after this short break.