Search Results

1354 results
  1. Where our reports come from

    Learn how IWF's 2024 reports originate from public submissions, partners and proactive searches to combat online child sexual abuse.

  2. Where our reports come from

    Discover the sources of our report in the 2025 Annual Data & Insights Report. We analyse the balance between public reports and proactive detection.

  3. Where to report non child sexual abuse

    A list of where to report some of the other types of harmful content you may see online.

  4. White Bullet collaborates with Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) to reduce child sexual exploitation online

    IWF and Cyber safety technology company, White Bullet, announce their collaboration to stop the monetisation of child sexual abuse images and videos through digital advertising.

  5. White House roundtable is 'important moment' in recognising threat of AI child sexual abuse imagery

    AI-generated child sexual abuse is on the agenda at the White House as Internet Watch Foundation CEO Susie Hargreaves flies to Washington to discuss how to address the rising threat.

  6. Who Guards the Guardians?

  7. Who we are

    The IWF is made up of a team of over 90 diverse team members working in a variety of disciplines including our team of front-line analysts

  8. Who we work with

    The Internet Watch Foundation work with a wide range of global partners to effectively find and remove online child sexual abuse imagery.

  9. Why Our Work with the Adult Sector is Vital

    Two years ago, IWF took a conscious and deliberate decision to work with companies which specialise in adult content.

  10. Why the EU’s temporary law allowing companies to detect child sexual abuse online must be extended

  11. Why we exist

    Why the Internet Watch Foundation exists, what it what set up to do, and how it does it.

  12. 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.