Sunday Mirror (Northern Ireland)

How a live streaming app opens the door to paedos

- Amy.sharpe@sundaymirr­or.co.uk

Corporatio­n. Founder Lee Hae-jin, 53, is worth an estimated £1.4billion.

The app encourages users to “showcase your talents and share important moments with a vast but personal audience”. Users are told chats are monitored and offensive comments will bring a ban.

Stickers and filters “provide that extra charm or cuteness when you need it” and streamers can send “gifts” to other users. Mutual followers can exchange private messages.

The app has positive reviews for its live streaming but some users warn of predators and a lack of age checks. One reviewer posting on Google App store wrote: “It is full of perving old men who sell your pictures and videos do not private chat with them!!”

Another wrote: “App is full of child predators! 13-year-old boys are really 30-40 men who sell your children’s pictures and videos on the internet.” A third posted: “Warning – this applicatio­n allows child abuse with no real control on the age or the content.”

Line Live is not the first videostrea­ming app to come under fire for child safety issues. TikTok – which has over two billion downloads – has been probed over its child data handling.

Last year it paid a record £4.5million fine to the US Federal Trade Commission for allowing under-13s to sign up without parental consent.

TikTok, owned by Beijing-based ByteDance, promised to remove all videos previously uploaded by anyone under 13. But in May a coalition of child privacy advocates said it found videos from minors still on the app.

Facebook faced criticism too. The NSPCC looked at 10,019 online grooming offences in England and Wales since April 2017, when it became illegal for adults to send sexual messages to kids.

Some 43 per cent were via Facebook-owned apps such as Messenger, Instagram and WhatsApp.

The NSPCC’s Mr Burrows said: “Tech firms have failed to design sites with child safety in mind. The Government has an opportunit­y to fix this if they urgently press ahead with an Online Harms Bill that holds companies and bosses to account.”

Mum Tina checks her children’s devices and has £5-amonth Sky Broadcast Buddy, allowing ageappropr­iate filters and limits on screen time. She said: “My son’s age banned him from SnapChat and Instagram because he is not old enough and I received an alert.

“It gave me a false sense of security. I hope other parents look out. This app is dangerous. My son doesn’t understand the severity and we hope the counsellin­g means it won’t hit him later. I didn’t handle it well and he feels bad for upsetting me, though it’s not his fault at all.”

Deborah Dennis, chief executive of the Stop It Now! helpline, which aims to prevent child sexual abuse, said: “Tech companies and government­s must do more to design the online places our children use to be safer. “This includes filters to block unwanted interactio­ns, simple ways of reporting content, and messages warning people carrying out risky or illegal behaviour to stop, but also telling them where to go for help to stay stopped.” Sky apologised

NSPCC chief Andy Burrows to Tina and said it had reclassifi­ed Line Live so that it is rated and filtered in line with other social media.

Facebook has trebled – up to 35,000 – the number of staff dedicated to safety and security. In June it joined Google, Microsoft and 15 other tech firms for Project Protect – a plan to combat online child sexual abuse with renewed investment.

TikTok has a minimum user age of 13 in the UK and under-16s are disabled from live streaming. Parents can pair accounts to monitor activity and app bosses are working with charities to strengthen safety measures.

A spokesman said it had “rapidly” strengthen­ed safety measures in the two years it had operated in the UK and added: “We have a zero-tolerance response on child sexual abuse material. All explicit and suspected grooming behaviours detected are escalated to our Child Safety Team in Dublin to investigat­e.”

TikTok said offenders were banned and any lawbreakin­g was reported.

Lockdown has exacerbate­d risk of online grooming and sexual abuse like never before

NSPCC CHIEF’S WARNING TO PARENTS

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WARNINGS
 ??  ?? ANDY BURROWS
ANDY BURROWS

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