Internet Watch Foundation is proudly adds name to two new campaigns focusing on improving the response to child sexual abuse in the EU
Blocking access to child sexual abuse content by our Members is carried out on a voluntary basis and is a short-term disruption tactic which works alongside the removal of content at source.
CSAM hosting around the world rose 64 percent last year, and a surge in the United States put it second behind the Netherlands, a new report found.
Images of children aged as young as seven being abused online have risen by almost two thirds while the number of webpages found to contain the most extreme material has doubled in recent years, according to a report.
The reason for the increase is due to the IWF’s new ability to proactively search for the criminal content.
Tech Secretary sees ‘heartbreaking’ scale of online child sexual abuse on IWF hotline visit as ‘transformational’ online safety rules come into effect
Wizz, a social discovery app that allows users from 13 to 24 to meet and chat with people their own age has come on board as a new Member of the Internet Watch Foundation.
Internet Watch Foundation CEO Susie Hargreaves has outlined the IWF and industry response to stepping up the fight against online child sexual abuse images and videos.
Expert analysts have taken action against 200,000 websites containing child sexual abuse material
IWF joins call to focus on effective solutions in fight against child sexual abuse online.