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  1. The Online Safety Act (OSA) Explained

  2. Child Helpline International

    We've partnered with CHI to build capacity amongst international helpline staff to deal with online child sexual exploitation and abuse.

  3. Pinsent Masons' Move for a Safer Internet 2024

  4. Security Institute announces partnership with Internet Watch Foundation

    Security Institute announces partnership with Internet Watch Foundation

  5. Internet Watch Foundation seeks ‘resilient’ candidates for unique leadership role

    New Head of Hotline role identified as ‘pivotal’ in the Internet Watch Foundation's mission to tackle child sexual abuse material online among growing threats such as AI generated imagery.

  6. Move for a Safer Internet: Three Years, Thousands of Minutes, and £60,000 Raised to Protect Children Online

    Three years ago, when Pinsent Masons set out to unite their communities to raise money for the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), no one could have predicted how far their idea would go or how many people would still be moving for the cause three years later.

  7. Why We Need to Speak with One Voice on Children’s Online Safety

    Parents across the world are calling for clearer, stronger action to keep children safe online.

  8. IWF urges EU leaders to act now on child sexual abuse as 109 organisations demand robust CSAR

  9. Tik Tok’s bold step puts children’s safety before the rush for extreme privacy - more should follow their example

    IWF CEO Kerry Smith welcomes TikTok’s decision to prioritise child protection over end‑to‑end encryption.

  10. EU failure on temporary derogation puts children at risk

    The IWF warns that the EU’s failure to extend the temporary derogation will force platforms to halt proactive detection of child sexual abuse, putting children at serious risk.

  11. Europe is about to make it illegal to protect children online

    On 3 April, essential child protection systems used by technology companies to detect and remove online child sexual abuse material will become illegal to operate in the EU unless the European Parliament votes to extend the current legal framework. A temporary law allowing voluntary detection is expiring, and political deadlock has stalled a permanent solution. This will create a dangerous legal vacuum that perpetrators are aware of and poised to exploit. Proven tools like hash‑matching - which do not compromise privacy - would be forced offline, enabling millions of known abusive images to resurface. Research shows these systems deter offenders and make access harder; disabling them will reverse this progress. MEPs have one final chance to act by voting for an amendment that preserves protections for children across Europe.

  12. International partnerships

    The IWF is one of the most effective hotlines in the world at removing child sexual abuse imagery from the internet, but this has only been possible thanks to the key international partnerships.