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Maendeleo Vijijini
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THE HAGUE
Live streaming of
child sexual abuse and so-called "revenge porn" is on the rise on the
internet, Europe's police agency warned Wednesday, saying vulnerable
children are increasingly falling victim to sexual predators.
"Live
distant child abuse is... being reported as a growing threat," Europol
said in its latest annual cyber organised crime threat assessment,
released at its headquarters in The Hague.
Live
streaming of child sex abuse "involves a perpetrator directing the live
abuse of children on a (pre-arranged) specific time-frame through video
sharing platforms," Europol said in the 72-page report.
"The abuse can be 'tailored' to the requests of the soliciting offender(s) and recorded", it added.
More
generally "the volume, scope and material cost of cybercrime all remain
on an upward trend and have reached very high levels," the agency said
in a separate statement.
Most illegal activities take
place in the so-called "darknet" or encrypted peer-to-peer networks,
which offer greater degrees of anonymity to users.
Traditionally
live stream child abuse groups were based in southeast Asia,
particularly the Philippines, but that "more recent reports indicate
that it is now spreading to other countries," Europol warned.
"Regions
of the world with high levels of poverty, limited domestic child
protection measures and easy access to children are being targeted by
offenders," the policing agency said, without naming specific countries.
"The
exploitation of children online is a huge problem for us," Steven
Wilson, Europol's cyber crime centre (EC3) chief told AFP in an
interview.
Wilson added cyber crime investigators have
also noticed a rise in so-called "revenge porn", where sexually explicit
images are posted without another person's consent in order to harm
that person or cause distress.
To counter these
threats, Europol was working on a series of information videos on the
dangers of online sexual abuse, which will soon be distributed in
schools across various European countries.
The report
also highlights other online cyber crimes, such as the growing threat of
ransomware, that infects a victim's computer and then captures data,
before demanding a payment for the data to be released.
Whereas
ransomware used to target individual victims and small businesses, it
now focused on major companies and even public institutions such as
hospitals, Wilson said.
"We have seen instances where
hospitals have had their records locked out, potentially with fatal
consequences," Wilson said, referring to an ongoing case in the United
States.
SOURCE: AFP
SOURCE: AFP
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