Number of web pages showing child porn doubles

The IWF was given new powers in the wake of the murders of Tia Sharp and April Jones. Picture: Michael GillenThe IWF was given new powers in the wake of the murders of Tia Sharp and April Jones. Picture: Michael Gillen
The IWF was given new powers in the wake of the murders of Tia Sharp and April Jones. Picture: Michael Gillen
The number of web pages found with images of child sexual abuse soared by 137 per cent last year, a UK internet watchdog has revealed.

The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) said it removed 31,266 URLs (web addresses) hosting pictures and videos of children being sexually abused in 2014, compared with 13,182 in 2013.

It comes after the regulator was given new powers to seek out criminal content online in the wake of the murders of Tia Sharp and April Jones.

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Both girls were murdered by men who had previously viewed child sexual abuse images on the internet.

IWF chief executive Susie Hargreaves that while the online industry was “stepping up” efforts to tackle child sexual abuse images, many companies did not recognise they had a problem, or were too slow to respond.

“It is not good enough for those companies to allow the burden of responsibility to fall on a socially responsible few,” she said. “This year will ensure they have nowhere to hide as we will be targeting them for the benefit of all internet users and victims of sexual abuse.”

The IWF, which was launched in 1996, is funded by 117 companies and organisations including technology giants Apple, Google, Facebook and Twitter.

An increase in funding last year saw the watchdog recruit another eight internet content analysts to root out child abuse imagery online, taking their total to 12.

In its annual report for 2014, the IWF said 0.3 per cent of imagery found last year was hosted in the UK, compared with 18 per cent in 1996. Most of the images identified were hosted in North America (56 per cent).

Ninety-five UK-based web pages or URLs were removed in 2014 because they were hosting child sexual abuse images and videos, the IWF said. Around 89 per cent of those pages contained images of children aged 10 or under, an increase from 65 per cent in 2013 and 79 per cent in 2012, the watchdog added.

Emma Hardy, the IWF’s director of external relations, said: “The biggest change for us last year was our ability to proactively search for child sexual abuse imagery.

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“Our analysts are able to actively search for the content, rather than merely wait for reports to come in from the 
public.

“That’s made a huge difference. Last year we were able to process 74,000 reports and within that we were able to identify just over 31,000 child sexual abuse web pages.

“I think there’s still a huge amount out there. We’ve got a long way to go until we see the peak of this problem.”

The IWF found many legitimate online services were being abused by criminals distributing abuse imagery. Image-hosting services, where users can upload images and make them available via a unique URL, were most abused last year, the IWF said.

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