‘Record levels of web pages hosting child sex abuse imagery discovered in 2024’

23 April 2025, 00:04

A child’s hand pressing a key of a laptop keyboard
Online Safety Act. Picture: PA

The Internet Watch Foundation has announced it will offer a new safety tool to smaller sites for free to help fight online harms.

Record levels of web pages hosting child sexual abuse imagery were discovered in 2024, a leading online safety organisation has said.

The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), which finds and helps remove abuse imagery online, said 291,273 reports of child sexual abuse imagery were reported in 2024.

In its annual report, the organisation said it was seeing rising numbers of cases being driven by threats, including AI-generated sexual abuse content, sextortion and the malicious sharing of nude or sexual imagery.

Many well intentioned and responsible platforms do not have the resources to protect their sites against people who deliberately upload child sexual abuse material

Derek Ray-Hill, Internet Watch Foundation

It said under-18s were now facing a crisis of sexual exploitation and risk online.

In response, the IWF announced it was making a new safety tool available to smaller websites for free, to help them spot and prevent the spread of abuse material on their platforms.

The tool, known as Image Intercept, can spot and block images in the IWF’s database of more than 2.8 million which have been digitally marked as criminal imagery.

The IWF said it will give wide swathes of the internet new, 24-hour protection, and help smaller firms comply with the Online Safety Act.

The Online Safety Act began coming into effect last month, and requires platforms to follow new codes of practice, set by the regulator Ofcom, in order to keep users safe online.

Derek Ray-Hill, interim chief executive at the IWF, said: “Young people are facing rising threats online where they risk sexual exploitation, and where images and videos of that exploitation can spread like wildfire.

“New threats like AI and sexually coerced extortion are only making things more dangerous.

“Many well intentioned and responsible platforms do not have the resources to protect their sites against people who deliberately upload child sexual abuse material.

The rise in cases of sextortion, child sexual abuse material, and most recently AI-generated abuse material shows how threats to young people online are constantly evolving

Technology Secretary Peter Kyle

“That is why we have taken the initiative to help these operators create safer online spaces by providing a free-of-charge hash checking service that will identify known criminal content.

“This is a major moment in online safety, and anyone with an online platform where users can upload content now has the chance to join the fight and help deliver the aspirations of the Online Safety Act.

“Together we can present a stone wall to those looking to spread child sexual abuse imagery.”

The IWF said Image Intercept had received funding support from the Home Office to aid with its creation.

Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said: “Visiting the IWF earlier this year was one of the most shocking and moving days I have experienced as Technology Secretary.

“I saw first hand the scale and sinister methods criminals are using to prey on young people, often beginning in what should be the safest place for a child – their bedroom.

“The rise in cases of sextortion, child sexual abuse material, and most recently AI-generated abuse material shows how threats to young people online are constantly evolving.

“But during my visit I also saw the extraordinary dedication of the IWF teams working daily to protect children from further harm and meet these new threats.

“Their new Image Intercept tool is a powerful example of how innovation can be part of the solution in making online spaces safer for children, a goal which – working with IWF and other partners – this Government is committed to delivering.”

The IWF’s latest findings are deeply disturbing, and show how urgent it is for us to tackle the growth of online child sexual abuse and intensify our efforts to protect children from these heinous crimes

Jess Phillips, minister

The IWF’s annual report also showed that in 97% of the incidents where the victim’s sex was recorded, the material showed the sexual abuse of girls only – which the IWF said was a sharp increase since 2023.

Jess Phillips, minister for safeguarding and violence against women and girls, said the new Image Intercept tool would be “vital” for protecting children.

“The IWF’s latest findings are deeply disturbing, and show how urgent it is for us to tackle the growth of online child sexual abuse and intensify our efforts to protect children from these heinous crimes,” she said.

“I want to thank the IWF for all the work they do to shine a light on this issue.

“Their Image Intercept initiative, funded by the Home Office, will be vital in helping to stop the re-victimisation of children who have been exploited online.

“But we must also hold technology platforms accountable.

“If they are to be safe places for our children, they must invest in technologies that block this harmful content and stop predators being able to access and groom children online.

“This Government is going further by introducing new measures so anyone who possesses an AI tool designed to create illicit images or owns manuals teaching them how to do so will rightly face time behind bars.

“We will continue to support the robust implementation of the Online Safety Act and will not hesitate to go further if necessary to keep our children safe.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Sir Elton John performing

Elton John says ‘we will not back down’ in awards speech addressing AI concerns

Live
Customers purchase Nintendo Switch 2 at an electronics retailer in Tokyo on June 5, 2025.

Nintendo Switch 2 launch live: Where to buy, best deals, and early verdict

In this photo illustration, an Apple logo is seen displayed alongside the Google logo.

Tech giants Apple and Google 'profiting from phone thefts', MPs claim

A man's hands using a laptop keyboard

Scots warned of ‘scamdemic’ as £860,000 lost to cyber criminals in 12 months

A close up image of a The North Face fleece

North Face and Cartier customer data stolen in cyber attacks

Imagery of a Zilch payments card and a virtual card

Buy now pay later provider Zilch to launch first physical card

UK’s most EV-friendly city has been revealed by new research.

Cities with slowest EV charging times and least amount of chargers revealed

View of a VodafoneThree logo outside the firm's offices

Vodafone completes Three UK mega-merger to form ‘new force’ in mobile market

A hand holding a Monzo bank card and a mobile phone showing the Monzo app

Monzo annual profit surges as paying subscribers boost digital bank

Majestic British Airways Airbus A380 taking off from London Heathrow at sunset, amazing colors

UK airspace shake-up could slash journey times and cut flight delays for millions of passengers

File photo dated 30/05/25 of the saltmarsh at Abbotts Hall in Essex. Saltmarshes are 'significant' carbon stores, but are at risk from rising sea levels, new research reveals

UK's muddy saltmarshes vital to tackle climate change, report finds

Nigel Farage

Reform backs cryptocurrency tax cut as party receives first Bitcoin donations

Digital devices on office workplace table of young business woman

‘Young people and black workers at highest risk of workplace surveillance’

Debris from the Titan submersible, recovered from the ocean floor near the wreck of the Titanic, is unloaded from the ship Horizon Arctic at the Canadian Coast Guard pier in St. John's, Newfoundland, in June 2023

The shock household item discovered in 'sludge' of OceanGate sub wreckage

Google is facing a £25 billion legal claim in the UK, accusing the tech giant of abusing its dominant position in the online search advertising market

Google facing £25 billion legal claim over abuse of search advertising market

A hand holding a phone showing the Nvidia logo

Nvidia posts strong growth despite ongoing tariff challenges