-
Help the IWF tackle child sexual abuse online at our second Online Child Safety Hackathon
-
40% increase in people seeking charity’s help to stop looking at online sexual images of children
-
'Pivotal moment' as Online Safety Act gains Royal Assent
The Internet Watch Foundation has heralded a “pivotal moment” in online safety as new laws to help make the internet safer for children are adopted in the UK.
-
Is this the UK’s toughest job?
-
Young men in London least likely in the UK to think child sex abuse imagery is the biggest problem on the internet
-
New IWF members aim to help fight to rid the internet of child sexual abuse images and videos
Online advertising company ExoClick joins the IWF as a member.
-
Europe remains ‘global hub’ for hosting of online child sexual abuse material
Europe remains the world’s largest hoster of child sexual abuse imagery with 62% of known images and videos being traced to a European Union country* in 2021.
-
Changes to UK Government’s Online Safety Bill welcomed
The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) supports an amendment to the Online Safety Bill which will demand the development of new technologies to better detect child sexual abuse material online.
-
Public warned as ‘disturbing’ new trend risks exposure to child sexual abuse material online
The public faces an “escalating risk” of accidental exposure to child sexual abuse online as a “disturbing” new trend rewards criminals for spamming social media with links to illegal material.
-
Pornhub: Data out of context tells us nothing.
We have a powerful sense of mission, with clarity, focus and purpose to our work. Our one single task – beyond all else – is the elimination of child sexual abuse material online.
-
Shorter working days, counselling and table tennis: How the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) takes care of its staff
-
We must stop the “horrifying” number of people looking at child sexual abuse material by removing it from the internet