Child Pussy Sex

Child Pussy Sex




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Child pornography is sexual abuse material.
One unforeseen consequence of the rise of the internet has been an explosion in the illicit trade of child sexual abuse images and videos.
[That’s over 480,769 images per week.]
Child sexual abuse material (legally known as child pornography) refers to any content that depicts sexually explicit activities involving a child. Visual depictions include photographs, videos, digital or computer generated images indistinguishable from an actual minor. These images and videos that involve the documentation of an actual crime scene are then circulated for personal consumption. More recently, live-streaming sexual abuse has begun to surface. In these instances individuals pay to watch the live abuse of a child via a video streaming service. This type of abuse is incredibly difficult to detect, due to its real-time nature and the lack of digital evidence left behind following the crime.
Though child sexual abuse material (CSAM) is a global issue, the United States remains one of the largest producers and consumers of child abuse content in the world. It’s important to understand the true nature and pervasiveness of child sexual abuse material to convey the urgent need to address this crime.
While “child pornography” remains the legal term for this material, the subject matter is one of the most violent, horrific forms of child abuse possible. For this reason, those working to combat this type of abuse have begun using the term “child sexual abuse material” (CSAM), which more accurately conveys the content and is explicitly tied to the source of the problem.
While there are studies that indicate risk factors that may increase the potential for exposure to sexual abuse, the ages and backgrounds of victims of sexual abuse know no bounds. Child sexual abuse images and videos found online involve both boys and girls from 0-18 years old. In their assessment of reports to their tipline, the Canadian Centre for Child Protection found that children under 12 years old were depicted in 78.30% of the images and videos assessed by their team, and 63.40% of those children were under 8 years of age. Among that same material, they found that 80.42% of the children were girls, while 19.58% were boys.
Multiple images that depict the same child become a record of abuse and can be shared many times over, far beyond the instance of abuse, resulting in further trauma into adulthood.
Often times, CSAM victims are abused by someone they know — people these children should have been able to trust. These offenders have close access to the children they are abusing, using grooming tactics to normalize sexual contact and encourage secrecy.
The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) data from 2013 shows:
Content produced by a parent or guardian:
Content is produced by a parent or guardian
Content produced by a neighbor or family friend:
Content is produced by a neighbor or family friend
Content stemming from online enticement:
Content stemming from online enticement
Those who seek to or are currently participating in the exploitation of children can connect on Internet networks and forums to sell, share, and trade material. These interactions are facilitated through several forms of internet technology, including websites, email, instant messaging/ICQ, Internet Relay Chat (IRC), newsgroups, bulletin boards, peer-to-peer networks, internet gaming sites, social networking sites, and anonymized networks.
The emergence of these online communities has also promoted communication between offenders, both normalizing their interest in children and desensitizing them to the physical and psychological damages inflicted on the children being exploited. These online communities often times provide a space to freely share interests, desires, and experiences abusing children, free of judgement and without fear of being caught.
We need to have the hard conversations.
We need to ensure that platforms are proactive.
We need to reduce the amount of people seeking out content.
Educate yourself on child abuse and the intersection with technology.
Stay active and engaged with your community to keep an eye out for signs of child abuse. Talk to your children about abuse and the unique risks on the internet.
They won’t be able to ask for help once something goes wrong and will need you to have your eyes open.
Here are just some of the organizations working to prevent abuse and provide survivors with resources. Get to know those in your community as well.
© 2021 Thorn. All Rights Reserved, thorn.org

By Mike Thomson
BBC Victoria Derbyshire programme and PM
Two-thirds of children forced into online sex abuse videos in the Philippines are exploited by their own parent or family member, it is claimed.
Much of the trade is driven by people in the West paying adults to make the films - many of whom say they need the money to survive.
Victims include infants as young as six months old, says the organisation International Justice Mission.
The Philippine government says it is working to combat the abuse.
Many of those buying the films specify what they want done to the children, with the resulting film then either live-streamed or posted online to the abuser, who watches it from their home.
Reports of suspected cases of online child sex abuse across the world have soared from just over 100,000 five years ago to more than 18 million last year, figures from the International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children suggest.
The Philippines is considered to be at the epicentre of the problem.
"One time, my friend and I took a shower together, and we were getting dressed. Her mother was also in the room with us.
"We thought she was looking at Facebook, but we realised the sound of a camera. I started feeling uncomfortable.
"My friend asked her mother, 'Why are you taking a photo?', and she replied, 'Oh, it's nothing.'"
Jhona said she was later told by police that the photos had been sold online.
"They said they were being sent to customers online in other countries."
The International Justice Mission, which works with agencies such as the FBI and the UK's National Crime Agency, has helped rescue around 500 Philippine children.
It says it has been on most raids and rescue operations conducted by local police over the last five years - about 150 in total - and in 69% of cases the abusers were found to be either the child victim's parents or a relative.
The organisation's national director, Sam Inocencio, said victims were becoming younger.
"About 50% are aged 12 or younger," he explained. "We've rescued a child who was six months old.
"And so we're actually talking here of infants, toddlers, pre-teens or pre-pubescent children being abused online."
Last month, a former British Army officer who arranged for children to be sexually abused in the Philippines while he watched online was jailed.
One mother-of-three living in the Philippines, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, admitted to the BBC she had distributed videos.
She said she did so with a clear conscience, as she had not made the original content.
"I asked the foreigner, 'You like the age 12 to 13?' He said he's OK with that," she explained.
"All he wanted from me is to pass videos to him of children having sex. It didn't matter to him where this took place."
The woman had been charged by police with selling indecent images of her own child.
Some church congregations are now regularly being warned to watch out for signs of online child sex abuse.
The issue is said by some to be fuelled by poverty.
But the pastor of one church in a poor area on the outskirts of Manila, Stephen Gualberto, said this was no excuse.
He described it as "sickening" that parents were "involved in prostituting their child on camera", and dismissed claims by some that they had no other option because they were poor.
"There are a lot of options, and you don't need to sell your child in order for your family to survive."
Earlier this year, Philippine police set up a new anti-child abuse centre in the country's capital, Manila, to fight the growing problem, helped by funding and training from British and Australian police.
But the government's undersecretary for commissions, Lorraine Badoy, admitted to the BBC: "I don't think we're making any significant dent because this is a very hidden crime."
She said she was "afraid what the social cost will be, having all these wounded children".
Follow the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme on Facebook and Twitter - and see more of our stories here.
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