GEN would not be where it is today without Splunk. The support has been fantastic; the product is wonderful. Splunk has been as much a stakeholder in the success of GEN as we have ourselves.
Human trafficking impacts an estimated 50 million people per year, but the data needed to trace perpetrators of this crime is poorly defined, siloed and hard to access.
GEN and Splunk teamed up to develop Minerva, an analytics platform that takes unstructured, siloed data from hundreds of sources to uncover the living heartbeats behind global human trafficking operations.
These innocent people will have their hopes and dreams broken by a life of forced labor or sex slavery. When Sherrie Caltagirone saw the suffering and injustice of human trafficking, it became her life’s mission to act. She founded GEN, a nonprofit organization of volunteers dedicated to using the power of data to help the up to 50 million annual victims of human trafficking.
“Trafficking is a human tragedy. But it’s also an illicit economy, where someone buys a product to meet a demand like sex and domestic servitude,” says Caltagirone. “That transaction often has a digital footprint. So human trafficking is a data problem; 99.9% of our daily battles are about accessing data to stop trafficking.”
The challenge for GEN was to bring historically siloed, dispersed data together to find victims, prosecute perpetrators and stop trafficking in its tracks. When looking for a technology partner to corral and analyze vast amounts of data, the organization evaluated several solutions, yet none could deliver — until Splunk.
GEN selected Splunk as its data platform when it was founded, and Splunk has been the bedrock of its mission ever since, supplying the organization with access to software licenses, training, support and education through the Splunk technology and training donations.
“GEN would not be where it is today without Splunk,” says Caltagirone. “The support has been fantastic; the product is wonderful. Splunk helps us correlate data and connect dots to identify the living heartbeats behind the data. We’ve found a true, full-hearted, all-in partner. Splunk has been as much a stakeholder in the success of GEN as we have ourselves.”
Together, GEN and Splunk developed Minerva, a multi-tenant data analytics platform that enables secure, individualized data sharing and intelligent analytics. This powerful platform uses Splunk to take messy, unstructured and siloed data from hundreds of sources to make connections between usernames, email addresses, phone numbers, text and images that would be difficult or impossible manually. Through GEN and Splunk Global Impact, Minerva is available free to national and international government and law enforcement agencies, NGOs, academia and the private sector to help identify and stop human trafficking.
GEN would not be where it is today without Splunk. The support has been fantastic; the product is wonderful. Splunk has been as much a stakeholder in the success of GEN as we have ourselves.
GEN is having a huge impact on countering human trafficking around the world — from proactively preventing crimes to driving change in overlooked industries. For example, when a large, legitimate U.S. massage chain received negative publicity around sexual misconduct and human trafficking, the organization approached GEN to help identify potential risks. GEN analyzed data related to employee screenings and monitored customers looking for sexual services, which has helped the chain close screening gaps and reduce misconduct. GEN then used Splunk to analyze millions of data points from over 22,000 massage businesses, helping curb the illicit massage industry on a larger scale.
For a preventive approach, GEN launched a program called Artemis with partner Accenture, which helps other massage businesses and hotels identify risks and vulnerabilities before a crime is committed. GEN is also working with recruitment companies, advertisers, private mailbox providers, landlords and training organizations to show how criminals hijack their services for trafficking.
Perhaps one of GEN’s greatest achievements is becoming a global force for change. The organization has broken down resistance to sharing data across stakeholders and has helped develop several anti-trafficking laws, such as Stop Enabling Sex Traffickers Act (SESTA) and Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act (FOSTA).
But GEN’s work isn’t done. For starters, the organization has a new version of Minerva in the works and plans to expand the Artemis program to industries like finance and aviation. GEN also hopes to expand the school uniform program, in addition to launching a global tool to protect children from potential predators. While many milestones still lie ahead, one thing’s for certain: With Splunk at the hub and Caltagirone at the helm, GEN is nearing a future that’s brighter, safer and free of human trafficking.