Daily Mail

Web giants can spot and delete images of child abuse...but don’t

- By Chris Greenwood and Emily Kent Smith

INTERNET giants have the technology to delete child abuse images automatica­lly but are failing to do so, a top investigat­or said last night.

Senior officers are frustrated that multi-million-pound internet companies are not proactivel­y screening out appalling images.

They want all firms to use technology similar to that which detects copyright music and films and blocks the material at source. This would free up investigat­ors to focus on the most serious offenders, who stalk the internet looking for vulnerable children to blackmail, threaten and abuse.

Some companies, such as Facebook and Instagram, do use software to detect inappropri­ate images, but investigat­ors want to see every company join them.

Will Kerr, a director of the National Crime Agency (NCA), accused web giants of refusing to take responsibi­lity and fuelling child abuse.

The former Northern Ireland counter-terrorism boss said: ‘We know there are thousands of children being unnecessar­ily exploited and abused in the UK where actually industry has the technologi­cal ability now to stop that at source.

‘We want to have the capability to go after higher- level offenders. There is the technologi­cal means now to pre-screen images. Why do we have, when we can technologi­cally stop it, indecent images of children on any of these platforms at all?’

Experts warn the UK is reaching a ‘tipping point’ as they face a tsunami of people accessing child abuse images.

They are arresting at least 400 suspects and protecting 500 children every month, generating huge strain on the criminal justice system. On top of this, the NCA fields up to 80,000 referrals a year from overseas agencies reporting suspected British paedophile­s online.

Officials insist there is no ‘stereotypi­cal paedophile’ and an increasing proportion of those caught are young men.

They suspect a new generation is becoming desensitis­ed to shocking images as a result of the easy availabili­ty of hard-core pornograph­y online.

In addition, they believe many teenagers have become ‘immune’ to images of sex acts as a result

‘UK reaching a tipping point’

of ‘sexting’, when young people swap intimate images.

One of the fastest-growing areas is the live-streaming of abuse via encrypted platforms, where Britons can pay for children to be abused ‘to order’, often in South East Asian countries.

Keith Niven, of the Child Exploitati­on and Online Protection Command, said the average age of those sending pictures was falling. He said the most common age for children to send a naked picture of them- selves or to become a victim of a picture being sent was 14, adding: ‘We are aware that the children are getting younger and younger.

‘ Very young children have access to phones and devices. So equally they can be vulnerable to predators who are looking to coerce young children.’

Facebook said: ‘We have zero tolerance for child exploitati­ve content on Facebook and are extremely aggressive in preventing and removing it.’

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