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  1. One in five child abuse images found online last year were category A – report

    Internet Watch Foundation says amount of material showing most extreme form of sexual abuse has doubled since 2020

  2. Webpages containing the most extreme child abuse have doubled since 2020

    Images of children aged as young as seven being abused online have risen by almost two thirds while the number of webpages found to contain the most extreme material has doubled in recent years, according to a report.

  3. IWF has record month as public reports of child sexual abuse surge

    IWF analysts have seen accelerating numbers of public reports of child sexual abuse, with more people staying and working from home among contributing factors.

  4. ‘Significant breakthrough’ as IWF analysts crack code used by predators to share child sexual abuse material online

  5. Olivia’s story

  6. IWF breaks record for actioning reports in a single day

  7. The US now hosts more child sexual abuse material online than any other country

    The US now hosts more child sexual abuse material online than any other country

  8. Digital fingerprints of a million child abuse images made

    Digital fingerprints of a million images of child sexual abuse have been created, the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) has said.

  9. The shocking transcripts that reveal how groomers sexually abuse children in their own rooms

    Jordan King, reporter for Metro, looks at IWF transcripts showing actual conversations between online groomers and child victims

  10. This Chatbot Aims to Steer People Away From Child Abuse Material

    Senior writer at WIRED, Matt Burgess, looks into Pornhub trialling a new automated tool that pushes CSAM-searchers to seek help for their online behaviour

  11. ‘Worst nightmares’ come true as predators are able to make thousands of new AI images of real child victims

    AI-Generated Child Abuse Sexual Imagery Threatens to “Overwhelm” Internet

  12. Apple should scan iPhones for child abuse images, says scanning technology inventor

    Prof Hany Farid says all online services should adopt idea backed by GCHQ and National Cybersecurity Centre