New analysis in the IWF’s annual report shows 11-13 year old girls are increasingly at risk of grooming and coercion at the hands of online predators
Campaigners are warning teenagers and their parents about online grooming and sexual exploitation as schools break up for the summer.
The Internet Watch Foundation is pleased to be among the winners of the Digital Communication Awards 2021.
New IWF data reveals a startling increase in ‘self-generated’ material where children have been tricked or groomed by predators.
New data released by the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) shows almost 20,000 webpages of child sexual abuse imagery in the first half of 2022 included ‘self-generated’ content of 7- to 10-year-old children.
The capacity for horrific images of AI-generated child sexual abuse to be reproduced at scale was underlined by IWF in the lead-up to the UK government’s AI Safety Summit.
The series of videos was created in collaboration with five governments, six companies and numerous NGOs within a two-week period.
Every 5 Minutes our analysts in Cambridge find & remove an image or video online of a child suffering sexual abuse.
This new campaign is aimed at raising awareness of the gradual increase of child sexual abuse material and how it can be reported by the public in target countries.
Internet Watch Foundation is proudly adds name to two new campaigns focusing on improving the response to child sexual abuse in the EU
'We ask everyone to join this noble cause aimed towards curbing this vice that threatens our children’s well-being'.