Watchdog wants global drive against online abuse
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Hundreds of child abuse websites around the world could be shut down if countries worked together to tackle the problem, an internet watchdog said.
The Internet Watch Foundation said it had made the first attempt to find out how many sites peddle abusive images and videos of children.
Its researchers found about 3,000 sites, with more than three-quarters run as commercial operations, typically by criminal gangs trying to make money out of the images.
"This is the first time any organisation has revealed the true scale of this issue and been clear that the problem is something that can be solved," the watchdog said in a statement.
Chief Executive Peter Robbins said the new figure would help build the case for a global drive to eradicate the sites.
He said: "A co-ordinated global attack on these websites could get these horrific images removed from the Web.
"Speculative figures can create a distorted picture of the scale of the problem of child sexual abuse websites."
The number of child abuse sites has remained static over the last few years, despite the growth of the internet, he added.
The watchdog's annual report called for a worldwide campaign by governments, police and the internet industry to investigate and disrupt abusive sites.
Computer networks in Russia and the United States host the most child abuse images, although many other countries are involved, a watchdog spokeswoman said.
It can be hard to shut illegal sites because operators constantly switch countries, temporarily close them or hop between different Internet hosting companies.
The victims come from many countries, although it is hard to pinpoint exact locations, the spokeswoman added.
"Child identification is an extremely difficult process," she said. "We often find that new material will surface in a non-commercial area . . . and those same images will appear on the commercial websites a year or so later."
Since 2003, less than one per cent of child abuse content has been hosted on UK computers, down from 18 per cent in 1997, the report says. Sites hosted in Britain are closed within hours.
During 2007, the majority (71 per cent) of global sites were "live" for less than 50 days of the year, the report said.
It also highlighted a significant problem with paedophiles sharing images between themselves online.
Set up in 1996, the Internet Watch Foundation is a self-regulating charity funded by the European Union and the internet industry. Its role is to remove child abuse, criminally obscene material and racist content from the internet.
- Reuters
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