Shehan said a law that requires them, if they become aware of child sexual abuse material, to file a report to the cyber tip line. "And we launched it in December." Social media companies work with law enforcement "We began building this in early 2022," Shehan said. Shehan said Meta also provided the financial resources to create the service. "They approached us and wanted to know if NCMEC would be willing to offer a service for individuals under the age of 18 that are anywhere in the world that may be in possession of new intimate imagery, wanting to report on someone else's behalf," Shehan said. Meta, the parent company for Facebook and Instagram, had partnered with the British organization, Shehan said, leading them to reach out to the center in hopes of launching a similar program in the U.S. One click away: One click away: New rollout of Amber Alerts on social media hopes to reach new audiencesĭropbox reported the cyber tips: Naples dentist charged with 200 child pornography counts, CCSO says 'Take It Down': New tool helps teens, others wipe the web of explicit images taken without consent John Shehan, senior vice president at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, said the new platform was influenced by United Kingdom-based Stop Non-Consensual Intimate Image Abuse. " Take It Down," five months in operation, aims to help minors remove their sexually explicit images from the internet as more and more youngsters face sextortion, suicide and other fallout from shared images. A recent breakthrough aimed toward removing sexually explicit content of minors online has received more than 7,000 reports in less than six months as the crime targets more and more youth.
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