Bring them home when they are taken.
Every hour after a child disappears, the probability of recovery drops. Five platforms built to collapse that clock — from the moment a youth is flagged at risk to the moment an investigator has a prioritized lead in hand. Speed, intelligence, coordination.
Beacon OS, Find OS, Victim ID Workbench, Triage, Shield OS
All five FIND platforms are Phase 2 — active design and co-development with law enforcement and nonprofit partners. First pilots Q3 2027.
Beacon OS
Children are listed online before their official missing date. Beacon sees the signal first.
Marinus Analytics testified to Congress in December 2025 that many trafficked children are advertised online before their official disappearance date. Beacon productizes that insight.
Find OS
A child is reported missing. The first 48 hours are everything. Find OS deploys in 60 minutes.
A child is reported missing. Within 60 minutes, Find OS runs the child's photo, identifiers, and last-known location across adult-service websites, social media handle crosswalks, public-photo facial similarity (consented databases only), AI age-progression matching, and geolocation pattern analysis where similar profiles have surfaced recently.
Victim ID Workbench
57,000 children in CSAM databases have never been identified. This is the platform to change that.
Tim Tebow Foundation's unKNOWN campaign is anchored on the estimated 57,000 unidentified child victims sitting in CSAM databases. Victim ID Workbench is the secure analyst-assist platform that organizes the work of identifying them.
Lighthouse Triage
Amazon filed 1.1 million reports in 2025. None were actionable. Triage fixes that.
Raw CyberTipline reports, state ICAC inbound, and tip-line tickets arrive without enough data for action. Senator Grassley's March 2026 letter to NCMEC made this public: Amazon AI Services filed 1.1 million reports in 2025, none of them actionable, because the underlying systems were designed not to capture location or suspect data.
Shield OS
17,500 police departments are investigating child crimes in Excel. We built them the tool they need.
17,500 US police departments have no specialized tooling for child-crimes investigations. They get tips into a generic records management system and end up working cases in Excel.
Building for law enforcement, nonprofits,
and the families who can't wait.
All FIND platforms are in active co-design with law enforcement partners, investigative nonprofits, and child welfare organizations. First pilots begin Q3 2027.