Drug trafficking and other criminal activities on social media have become a growing social concern. To evade detection by law enforcement and automated monitoring systems, offenders use dark jargons, often combining multiple common words to form “dark jargon”—covert dark jargons that are difficult to identify. Once authorities recognize these dark jargons, offenders quickly switch to new ones, making it a constant race to keep up with the evolving words.

  • webghost0101@sopuli.xyz
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    2 days ago

    Green-Crack" or “Pineapple-Chunk,” both known as dark jargons for illegal substances

    Lmao those are just strain names for cannabis.

    So just because i know the names “white widow” and “budha cheese” thats enough to make me a criminal okioki.

    I thought chatcontrol was about save the kids? /s

    Wtf do they mean rapid evolving you can literally look them up.

    https://www.leafly.com/strains/pineapple-chunk

  • superkret@feddit.org
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    2 days ago
    • University of Electro-Communications
    • Journal of Information Processing
    • Detection of Compound-Type Dark Jargons Using Similar Words

    These sound like something made up by a teenager trying to sound smart.

    during interviews with police officers experienced in organized crime investigations, 93% of the newly detected dark jargons were confirmed as previously unknown. This highlights the potential of the AI to reveal emerging dark jargons that evade current detection efforts.

    I can think of several more plausible explanations.

  • otter@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    Is no one going to point out the irksome idiocy in pluralizing jargon as “jargons”? 🤦🏽‍♂️