Search Results

28 results
  1. New AI child sexual abuse laws announced following IWF campaign

  2. Think Before You Share

    Our campaign aims to help young people understand the harm of sharing explicit imagery online and encourage parents and educators to start conversations.

  3. Boost for children’s online safety as Welsh Government becomes first Government to join IWF

    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.

  4. Child Safety Online must be a priority

    13 organisations launch campaign to stop the spread of child sexual abuse material online

  5. IWF joins leading policing researchers to tackle online grooming and sexual imagery of children

    The findings will be ‘invaluable’ in turning the tide on the threat children are facing from online predators.

  6. Child Helpline International

    We've partnered with CHI to build capacity amongst international helpline staff to deal with online child sexual exploitation and abuse.

  7. No such thing

    IWF is campaigning for an end to use of the phrase ‘child pornography’. There’s #NoSuchThing. It’s child sexual abuse imagery and videos.

  8. Awareness campaign in Zambia and Uganda

    Major IWF campaign to help boost child welfare and internet safety in Uganda and Zambia.

  9. Call for experts to help tackle growing threat of ‘self-generated’ online child sexual abuse material

  10. The International Center for Missing and Exploited Children

    Alongside ICMEC, we are building capacity around child online protection internationally with capacity building events and the launch of IWF reporting portals.

  11. Our campaigns

    In conjunction with partners in the private and public sector, we regularly run campaigns aimed at raising awareness & prevention of child sexual abuse online.

  12. Self-generated child sexual abuse fieldwork findings report

    This report conducted in collaboration with the Policing Institute for the Eastern Region (PIER) highlights the gravity of self-generated child sexual abuse material.