Tech Companies Reported Over 45 Million Child Porn Images & Videos on Their Platforms in 2018 Article
About 12 million of the worldwide reports of graphic child exploitation images and videos actually came from Facebook messenger users alone.
About 12 million of the worldwide reports of graphic child exploitation images and videos actually came from Facebook messenger users alone.
In a world where porn is continually seen as healthy, we’re always grateful to see its harms discussed on mainstream platforms.
The terms are simple: Get someone to have sex with you, write up what happened in graphic detail, then post it to a closed Facebook group.
While abuse like this should never, the student’s response to the situation is an empowering example of what other kids can do when faced with predators.
After years of opposition and delays, the UK has abandoned its age-verification law aimed at preventing young children and teens from accessing porn sites.
The New Zealand Ministry of Education said more than 300,000 searches for pornography were censored on school networks in one month recently.
Thousands of groups are sharing illegal child porn unchecked, while monetizing and sustaining themselves by running Google and Facebook’s ad networks.
The report states that in the past year the number of disguised websites that provide a secret route to child sexual abuse content had risen by 86%.
Prosecutors say Colombian model Liliana del Carmen Campos Puello used her social media status to promise over 400 girls fame and fortune.
The unfortunate truth is, like most social media apps, TikTok has been reported for a series of issues: child porn and predators, and hardcore porn.
46% of minors who said they had watched porn were first exposed to it by accident—often as a result of pop-up images or links on social media.
A simple porn search can bring up hundreds of videos that basically portray a scripted version of the abuse the 13-year-old student was subjected to.