Credit: Gustavo Turner

February 13, 2024

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Credit: Gustavo Turner

February 13, 2024

DÜSSELDORF, Germany — The local official behind the crusade for Germany to require age verification for viewing sexual content has successfully exported to Belgium his new AI tool, KIVI, which automatically scans all online content to determine which images are not compliant with the law.

As XBIZ reported, Tobias Schmid, director of the State Media Authority of North Rhine-Westphalia, and one-man War on Porn, held a press conference in April 2022 boasting of the surveillance mechanism. He explained that he coined the name KIVI after “KI” — the German initials for AI — and “VI” from the Latin word “vigilare,” meaning “to survey.”

A month later, German tech news site NetzPolitik reported that Schmid’s regulatory bureaucracy was actively “working with KIVI throughout Germany and hopes that the whole of Europe will soon be using this tool to monitor the public internet.”

NetzPolitik reporter Sebastian Meineck, who has been covering Schmid’s meticulous, obsessive attempts to ban all sexual content from open platforms in Germany and Europe, wrote that Schmid told a newspaper, “We are pleased that our European colleagues are also very interested.”

Schmid’s agency, Meineck added, “networks with regulatory authorities in other EU countries in a group called ERGA (European Regulators Group for Audiovisual Media Services).”

A spokeswoman for the State Media Authority of North Rhine-Westphalia confirmed to NetzPolitik that there were “exploratory talks”taking place regarding expanding KIVI surveillance all across Europe.

Last week, Meineck confirmed that Belgium’s media watchdog CSA (Conseil Superieur De l’Audiovisuel) is “also automatically searching the Internet, looking for freely accessible pornography, among other things.”

Adult content is reportedly automatically flagged by the system as “suspicious,” triggering a ticket for human verification.

Targeting Porn Before Hate Speech

KIVI was developed by Berlin-based Condat under Schmid’s supervision and is currently being used by all 14 state media authorities in Germany. While KIVI has been trained to detect categories like “extremism, hate speech, swastikas or the glorification of drugs,” Schmid also included “pornography” as a target for the new surveillance engine.

Schmid is particularly obsessed with “pornography” and has personally singled out “gangbangs” in public statements as a concept that bothers him.

KIVI is currently surveying images, texts and videos on all websites, as well as apps like “Telegram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, the Russian Facebook competitor VKontakte and the video portal Bitchute,” NetzPolitik reported.

With the Belgium partnership, Germany’s provincial regulatory authority from North Rhine-Westphalia is now on the road to becoming, in Meineck’s words, “largely responsible for the introduction of a European porn detector.”

Belgium’s CSA has started scanning X.com for adult content. “From September to December 2023, around 5,000 suspicious activity reports were collected,” Meineck reported. “Examiners viewed around a fifth of it, and around 90 percent of this content was ‘clearly’ pornographic, and thus should not be accessible without strict age controls.”

The Belgian media regulator adapted Schmid’s German-language module with 250 French keywords, “apparently from the pornography sector, as well as 90 particularly active accounts,” Meineck added.  “This apparently refers to social media profiles that, in the opinion of the media watchdogs, distribute a particularly large amount of pornographic content.”

Belgian authorities specifically targeted adult content upon obtaining Schmid’s software, leaving for a later date “to expand the use of KIVI to cover hate speech.”

Meineck also reported that at the end of 2022, Austria was said to be interested in KIVI, but a rep from the state-run Broadcasting and Telekom Regulatory GmbH (RTR) told NetzPolitik the plans had been aborted.

A spokesman for co-developer Condat AG noted that there are “currently no concrete implementation plans for use in other countries.”