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<p>The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) has had significant success in reducing the
amount of child sexual abuse material hosted in the UK. Since 2014, the IWF has proactively
searched for and removed illegal imagery of children. As a result of IWF’s work to
flag material to companies for removal, its most recent annual report (for 2017) states
that less than 1% of child sexual abuse imagery continues to be hosted in the UK,
down from 18% in 1996 when IWF was first set up.</p><p>IWF’s latest statistics, published
in January, show that more than 100,000 webpages showing the sexual abuse and sexual
torture of children have been removed from the internet thanks to the IWF in 2018
– up by one third on the year before. In 2018, 4 out of 10 of the webpages the IWF
actioned for removal displayed the sexual abuse of children aged 10 years old and
younger, with infants and babies featuring more than 1,300 times.</p><p>The IWF has
been at the centre of work providing industry with hashes — digital fingerprints -
of known abuse images which originate from UK law enforcement's Child Abuse Image
Database (CAID). So far, thousands of hashes have been shared leading to webpages
containing child sexual abuse imagery being blocked or removed.</p>
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