Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Stop online sex predators

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One of the biggest telecom companies in the Philippine­s had reported blocking nearly half a million child pornograph­y websites in 2023 after the United Statesbase­d National Center for Missing and Exploited Children tagged the country as a leading source of online child sexual abuse content.

Globe said it blocked 489,849 child porn websites last year, a 22-percent increase compared to the 401,487 it restricted in 2022. It noted that the number of disabled URLs hosting such content rose from 399,550 in 2022 to 486,802 in 2023, up by 21.8 percent. The figure for blocked domains also saw a 56.5 percent surge from 1,947 two years ago to 3,047 last year, it added.

The company maintained that to comply with Republic Act 9775, or the Anti-Child Pornograph­y Act of 2009, it had to invest in P151-million worth of content-filtering tools to boost its blocking capabiliti­es. In a media statement, the company said it wanted to go “beyond blocking harmful content” by fostering a “culture of vigilance.” This, the statement added, is to “protect the most vulnerable members of our society from the pervasive threats that lurk online.”

Under RA 9775, all Philippine-based telcos are mandated to stop their facilities from serving as portals or gateways to the exploitati­on of children, even as national and local government agencies move to stop the online sexual exploitati­on of Filipino children abetted in most cases by their parents or guardians.

A lot more can be done, however, not only by the telcos but also by the many social media platforms like Meta’s Facebook in shutting down child pornograph­y websites. Meta, for example, has laid claim to providing children with safe and positive online experience­s while reporting instances of child exploitati­on to the NCMEC.

“We don’t allow content or behavior that violates our policies against child sexual exploitati­on and we take steps to remove this content, report it to NCMEC, and liaise with law enforcemen­t where appropriat­e,” Meta said. “Electronic Service Providers are legally obligated to report apparent violations of laws related to child sexual abuse material, or CSAM, they become aware of to NCMEC’s CyberTipli­ne.”

“In addition to reporting content we become aware of, we’ve developed sophistica­ted technology to proactivel­y seek out this content, and as a result we find and report more CSAM to NCMEC than any other service today. We make this technology available to the industry to help protect children from exploitati­on across the internet,” it added.

Further, Meta vowed to start publishing additional data on top of what the NCMEC already publishes on the number of cybertips it receives from ESPs pertaining to the uploading and consumptio­n of child pornograph­y. It said it would go one step further by starting to provide insight to the reports to the NCMEC on the inappropri­ate interactio­ns with young people.

Meta said that in the second quarter of last year, it reported over 3.7 million incidents to the NCMEC culled from its Facebook and Instagram platforms. It warned that of the total, 48,000 involved questionab­le interactio­ns by adults with children, including sexual solicitati­on and attempts to meet and cause harm to a child not just online but in person.

“We’ve developed more than 30 tools to support safe, positive online experience­s for teens and their families. For example, we automatica­lly set teens’ accounts to private when they join Instagram; we restrict people over 19 years old from sending private messages to teens who don’t follow them; we use age verificati­on technology to help teens have age-appropriat­e experience­s; and we have parental supervisio­n tools that let parents see who their teen reports or blocks,” Meta said.

In light of the alarming rise in child sexual exploitati­on content online, it is imperative for telecom companies and online platforms to collaborat­e with government­s and organizati­ons like NCMEC and child safety experts. This battle demands a united front.

Telecom giants and online platforms like Meta must fully commit to transparen­cy, and sharing data on the sexual exploitati­on of children online. There is always room for more comprehens­ive reporting and for fostering a culture of vigilance.

As guardians of the digital realm, these companies should not only meet their legal obligation­s but go beyond, investing in innovative solutions and strategies to protect our society’s most vulnerable members.

“Under RA 9775, all telcos are mandated to stop their facilities from serving as portals or gateways to the exploitati­on of children.

“Telecom giants and online platforms like Meta must fully commit to transparen­cy, and sharing data on the sexual exploitati­on of children online.

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