By Fred Langford, IWF Deputy CEO and CTO
A guide for parents and carers from the Internet Watch Foundation and our partners at the Home Office. Available in English and Welsh.
Meta announces rollout of end-to-end encryption on its platforms, beginning with Facebook Messenger.
Not all Encryption is the same: social media is not ready for End-to-End Encryption. IWF CTO Dan Sexton explains the differences in the technology behind the debate.
The debate on the EU’s proposed Child Sexual Abuse Regulation (CSAR) has been dominated by one loud slogan. A slogan which may have dire consequences for the safety and wellbeing of millions of children worldwide.
Discover how end-to-end encryption works & why upload prevention is key to preventing the spread of child sexual abuse imagery and protecting privacy.
IWF paper sets out how end-to-end encrypted messaging can be protected from child sexual abuse without breaking encryption.
More than nine in ten people in the UK say they are concerned at how images and videos of children being sexually abused are shared through end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) messaging services.
Learn how upload prevention stops child sexual abuse material (CSAM) from spreading on encrypted platforms while safeguarding user privacy.
Professor Hany Farid speaks to IWF about Encryption Vs. Privacy as part of their new podcast series on child sexual abuse imagery online.
Prof Hany Farid says all online services should adopt idea backed by GCHQ and National Cybersecurity Centre
In a new podcast released by the Internet Watch Foundation, the charity says introducing end-to-end encryption to messaging apps could hinder the detection and removal of child sexual abuse material from the internet.