Google and Microsoft agree steps to block abuse images
as many as 100,000 search terms will
now return no results that find illegal material, and will trigger warnings
that child abuse imagery is illegal.
PM
David Cameron has welcomed the move but said it must be delivered or he would
bring forward new legislation.
Child
protection experts have warned most images are on hidden networks.
In
July, Mr Cameron called on Google and Microsoft's Bing - which together account
for 95% of search traffic - to do more to prevent people getting access to
illegal images.
He
said they needed to ensure that searches which were unambiguously aimed at
finding illegal images should return no results.
The
issue of online images showing the sexual abuse of children has made headlines
in recent months after the convictions of Stuart Hazell and Mark Bridger for
the murders of Tia Sharp and April Jones.
Both
Hazell and Bridger were known to have sought out and viewed child abuse images
online.
Downing Street said the government would be checking to see that
internet companies acted "urgently" .
Google
and Microsoft joined other internet firms, the National Crime Agency (NCA) and
charities at Downing Street for an internet safety summit earlier.
At
the meeting, the NCA's director general said initial tests showed that changes
introduced by the search engines were working.
The
prime minister told the meeting the UK would hold an international summit on
the issue next year, with a "specific focus on protecting the victims of
online child abuse".
Typing
"child pornography" in to Google's search engine now brings up a set
of search results that include warnings that child abuse imagery is illegal.
The
first three links are all related to reporting disturbing images or seeking
help if you think you or someone you know has a problem with child abuse
images.
The
first link is an advert that links to a Google statement about protecting
children from sexual abuse. The next link directs you to the Internet Watch
Foundation, where you can report criminal online content, and a link to Stop it
Now advises users how they can get help and advice.
The
remaining search results are mainly news stories from around the world
reporting on child abuse images.
Speaking after the summit, Mr Cameron said the next stage was
to target the "dark internet" - where people share images online
without making them publicly available.
He
said Britain would work with other countries and use its "best
brains" to catch people who share images of child abuse.
New
software
Now
both companies have introduced new algorithms [software instructions] that will
prevent searches for child abuse imagery delivering results that could lead to
such material.
Google
communications director Peter Barron said the changes, which had cleaned up the
results for more than 100,000 queries that might be related to the sexual abuse
of children, would make it "much, much more difficult to find this content
online".
"We're
agreed that child sexual imagery is a case apart, it's illegal everywhere in
the world, there's a consensus on that. It's absolutely right that we identify
this stuff, we remove it and we report it to the authorities," he said.
The
restrictions will be launched in the UK first, before being expanded to other
English-speaking countries and 158 other languages in the next six months.
Warnings
- from both Google and charities - will make it clear child abuse is illegal.
Microsoft,
which in a rare display of unity is working closely with Google on this issue,
says its Bing search engine will also produce clean results.
Microsoft's
general manager of marketing and operations Nicola Hodson said:
"Day-to-day we're fierce competitors, and we collaborate on this issue
because it transcends that.
"It
will be much harder to find that content on both Bing and Google. We are
blocking content, removing content and helping people to find the right content
or also sources of help should they need that," she said.
Tory
MP Claire Perry, Mr Cameron's adviser on the sexualisation and
commercialisation of childhood, told THE1LINK Radio 4's Today programme the new
measures were a "great step forward".
Analysis
Google
and Microsoft's efforts will make it harder to search for abuse images but will
do nothing to limit access to what is on the deep web or held on darknets.
The
deep web is simply those parts of the web not catalogued by search engines.
These are the parts of websites search crawlers do not visit or cannot find.
Some
deep web sites are password protected, or only give access to people visiting
from certain addresses or are forums or places that block indexers or use file
formats they do not log.
Darknets
are stand-alone networks that sit separate to the web but are accessible to
those that run the right software to get at them. Many operate on a
peer-to-peer basis and can only be accessed by those invited to join them.
"We're not declaring victory but this is a massive step
in the right direction," she said.
Lyn
Smith, grandmother of April Jones, who was killed by Mark Bridger in October
last year, welcomed the plans for new online restrictions.
"I
don't know if it's enough but it's a start. I'm glad David Cameron has got
involved in this," she said.
'Missed
opportunity'
But
Jim Gamble, former head of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre
(Ceop), told THE1LINK Breakfast he did not think the measures would make any
difference with regard to protecting children from paedophiles.
"They
don't go on to Google to search for images. They go on to the dark corners of
the internet on peer-to-peer websites," he said.
He
said search engines had already been blocking inappropriate content and the
latest move was just an enhancement of what was already happening.
A
better solution would be to spend £1.5m on hiring 12 child protection experts
and 12 co-ordinators in each of the police regions to hunt down online
predators, he added.
NSPCC
chief executive officer Peter Wanless said "a concerted and sustained
effort from all quarters" was needed to stay one step ahead of sex
offenders, who were getting ever more technologically advanced.
"This
is the key child protection issue of a generation - we cannot fail," he
said.
A
June report by Ceop highlighted how the "hidden internet" helped
distributors of child abuse images evade detection by using encrypted networks and
other secure methods.
Google
and Microsoft have agreed to work with the UK's National Crime Agency and the
Internet Watch Foundation to try to tackle networks which host child abuse
images.
The
two companies are also using their technological expertise to help in the
identification of abuse images.
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