Home Secretary, The Rt Hon Yvette Cooper MP, outlines the UK’s commitment to tackling online child sexual abuse and supporting the work of the IWF.
IWF is campaigning for an end to use of the phrase ‘child pornography’. There’s #NoSuchThing. It’s child sexual abuse imagery and videos.
'This is an important step in ensuring our world-leading expertise can be quickly drawn upon by police and law enforcement the world over.'
Experts warn that 1% of the entire male population could be ‘interested in sex with prepubescent children’.
Boost for children’s online safety as Welsh Government becomes first Government to join IWF. Welsh language resources will help children spot the signs of online grooming and abuse.
Our values act as our guiding light and daily benchmark, ensuring we act consistently across our organisation at all times for the sake of victims of child sexual abuse.
Thousands of images and videos of child sexual abuse could be going undetected because internet analysts’ time is being taken up dealing with “false reports”, experts warn.
Girls aged between 11 and 13 are more at risk of being groomed by sexual predators on the internet than ever before, new figures show.
Advice on what you can do if you've received a spam email claiming to be from the IWF. We do not recommend responding to these emails or clicking any links.
British adults would consider boycotting online brands which do not do enough to keep their services free of child sexual abuse images and videos.
The series of videos was created in collaboration with five governments, six companies and numerous NGOs within a two-week period.