London’s top-level domain name, Dot London, signs up to the Internet Watch Foundation to help safeguard internet users from criminal content.
IWF and Black Forest Labs join forces to combat harmful AI-generated content. The partnership grants the frontier AI lab access to safety tech tools.
Domain .ME, the registry for the .ME domain extension, has partnered with the Internet Watch Foundation to help put an end to child sexual abuse imagery online
The cyber criminals dupe victims into sending nude images and then extort them.
IWF analysts have worked through the coronavirus lockdown to make sure children are kept safe.
The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) welcomes the outcome of the meeting that the Culture Secretary called for on Tuesday 18 June. The IWF is looking forward to closely working with its members and other partners, both nationally as well as internationally, to step up the fight against online child sexual abuse content.
Local MP Ian Sollom learned about the herculean task faced by analysts at the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) who find, assess and remove child sexual abuse material on the internet.
The IWF is calling for greater clarity on online harms as MPs warn new online safety legislation needs to be made more robust to help keep children safe online.
We have a powerful sense of mission, with clarity, focus and purpose to our work. Our one single task – beyond all else – is the elimination of child sexual abuse material online.
Peers warn lack of clarity on IWF role could create ‘vacuum which allows hateful material to proliferate’
We work independently of government but we have close working relationships with various departments including the Home Office and DCMS.