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The European Commission building in Brussels. Alamy Stock Photo

EU Commission plans to force web firms to combat child sex abuse images

The plan calls for a European centre to combat child sexual abuse, based in The Hague and working with police agency Europol.

THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION has proposed new rules to force online service providers to detect, report and remove child sex abuse images from their networks.

The plan calls for a European centre to combat child sexual abuse, based in The Hague and working with police agency Europol.

“We are failing to protect children today,” EU home affairs commissioner Ylva Johansson warned.

In 2021, 85 million videos and photos involving abused minors were reported, according to data from the US Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

“And that’s just the tip of the iceberg,” Johansson said.

As many as 95% of reports of illegal content involving child sexual abuse come from Facebook’s social network and messenger system, but the problem is not limited to a single platform, the European Commission says.

Currently, internet service providers are attempting to control the spread of paedophile content on a voluntary basis. But Brussels now wants them to be more proactive in hunting out harmful content rather than investigating complaints.

The new rules will operate in parallel and in support of the regulation strategy in the EU’s Digital Services Act, which will introduce big fines for firms that fail to act on illegal content.

© AFP 2022 

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    Mute Daniel Murray
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    May 11th 2022, 1:57 PM

    I’m all for stopping anything of this kind but this opens the gate to compelling ISPs to search and remove any content that powers that be see fit. That is dangerous.

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    Mute Joan Doyle
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    May 11th 2022, 3:02 PM

    @Daniel Murray: more has to be done to protect children. the mental health of future generations is more important than the freedom to post whatever you want on the net

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    Mute Jim Buckley Barrett
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    May 11th 2022, 3:09 PM

    @Joan Doyle: “post whatever you want on the net” – you are referring to free speech. Blocking child porn – 100% agree, but what’s the definition of “illegal content” and who defines that?

    Imagine the government here declaring that anti-water charge contents to be illegal…

    People have died giving us our right to free speech among other rights.

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    Mute Ixtrix Net
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    May 12th 2022, 8:56 AM

    Unsure if was correct to add that the internet service providers are doing it voluntarily, with the amount of it on social media platforms or facebook groups.
    ISP’s don’t exactly ‘see’ what’s being posted on a private telegram group, or even a facebook private group.
    The ISP’s could do more than just flagging some low hanging activity, but the resources required are not cheap if they need start inspecting secure connections.
    Was exactly a fan of the Apple thing about scanning pictures against a (type of) database to prevent the upload to iCloud or sharing, but wasn’t a terrible starting point for an approach.
    Regardless, sites and social media, are a different thing to ISP’s.

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