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One million child sex images removed from web by watchdog in a year

One million child sex images removed from web by watchdog in a year One million child sex images removed from web by watchdog in a year:


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More than a million child sex abuse images were removed from the web by a British watchdog last year..This was up by more than a third on 2017 and the figures lay bare the scale of the problem the watchdog faces in tackling the online scourge.Four out of ten of the web pages showed victims aged ten and under, including some who had yet to reach their second birthday. They tended to be involved in the most severe forms of abuse: ‘category A’ images, showing rape and sexual torture. However, there has also been an explosion in the number of ‘tweenagers’ – children aged 11 to 13 – targeted by paedophiles, who trick their victims into filming themselves at home.More than half of the shocking posts removed by the IWF showed such youngsters, who are at an age when they are often particularly emotionally vulnerable and naive. Many of them had been manipulated into filming themselves via smartphones or web cams.In some cases, paedophiles used videos of other children to trick their victims into thinking that they were talking to someone in their own age group. In other instances, the predators had groomed their victims. RELATED ARTICLES Previous 1 2 Next Secretly filmed while you shop: Some of Britain's biggest... A global retail practice: The colossal reach of insight... Wimbledon FINALLY goes digital with new online ticket ballot... Share this article Share The paedophiles then shared the ‘live streamed’ video around the web, sometimes charging for access to the images.Susie Hargreaves, chief executive of the IWF, said: ‘It is children in a bedroom, in domestic settings. It breaks my heart when I see children who look around 11 years old who are going through enormous changes physically and emotionally being exploited by unscrupulous adults.’In the first three months of last year, one in three of the abuse images removed by the IWF were these sorts of ‘self-generated’ images, which have ‘serious repercussions’ for the victims, the watchdog said in its annual report.The unit is the only organisation in the UK, other than the police, that has the power to legally seek out child sex abuse images in order to remove them.Only 41 of the 105,047 web pages that were removed (0.04 per cent) were traced back to the UK. Nearly half of them were hosted in the Netherlands.Tens of thousands were also tracked back to the US, Slovakia and Russia. Miss Hargreaves said the vast number of web pages the organisation has eliminated shows that it has become more efficient at removing problem images.But she added that it is a ‘double-edged sword’ because it also indicates the sheer scale of the problem.‘It’s always going to be a bit of cat and mouse,’ she said.The IWF – which has only 13 analysts assessing the vile images – uses ‘hashing technology’, which allocates ‘digital fingerprints’ to images so that computers can seek out and automatically remove copies while also stopping them from being re-uploaded. But paedophiles have also become increasingly sophist
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