childpornography
There was an 8 per cent increase in child sexual abuse imagery in 2023 compared to the previous year, making it the worst in history, according to a new report from the UK-based Internet Watch Foundation (IWF). The charity, which tracks and takes down pages with explicit content featuring children, found over 270,000 web pages last year, roughly one every two minutes, with some featuring thousands of images or videos. The report also found that Germany’s .de domain was targeted by criminals advertising “the most extreme types of child sexual abuse” in 2023. With over 3,000 addresses, the domai...
Euronews (English)
The findings uncover an uncomfortable truth about how children are left to their own devices when navigating the digital world, increasing their vulnerability to harm. Conducted by non-governmental organisations ECPAT International, Eurochild and Terre des Hommes Netherlands, the study involved focus group discussions with 483 children from 15 countries, including ten EU member states. Many of those children said they prefer to keep their online activities to themselves and struggle to talk with adults about the risks they face online. Others said they filter what they tell their parents and c...
Euronews (English)
Even though a majority of people are concerned about artificial intelligence (AI), roughly 70 per cent are unaware that it’s already being used to create child sexual abuse content, a new survey shows. The Lucy Faithfull Foundation, a UK-based child protection charity, surveyed over 2,500 people in the UK and around 88 per cent of people surveyed agreed that AI-generated sexual images of under-18s should be illegal. However, just 40 per cent of those surveyed either didn’t know it was the case or thought that this content was legal in the UK. In the EU and the UK, it is illegal to create, view...
Euronews (English)
Lawmakers and governments today (15 February) agreed to extend a temporary solution to combat child sexual abuse material online, which will now be in place until 3 April 2026. The deal comes as existing arrangements, under which companies can voluntarily scan their services, are set to expire on 3 August — while plans for a longer-term fix have raised significant concerns over privacy and encryption. Today’s agreement will extend that system for another two years, a mid-way point between EU lawmakers who wanted a one-off extension to May 2025, and member states who favoured 2027. The interim ...
Euronews (English)
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