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Culture Jul 1, 2020 5:00 PM
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Anna Slatz and Ian Miles Cheong Montreal, QC
July 1, 2020 5:00 PM 4 mins reading
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A new investigation by The Post Millennial reveals that the distribution of child pornography is happening in plain sight on Twitter.



This article was published more than 1 year ago,
information might not be up to date.

Statement: All accounts found to have or be soliciting child sex exploitation material during the course of this investigation were immediately reported to Twitter .
A new investigation by The Post Millennial reveals that the distribution of child pornography is happening in plain sight. While many believe the distribution of these illicit materials is relegated to the seedy underbelly of the internet, this belief is far from true.
On Twitter, pedophiles seeking to exchange child pornography and other child sex exploitation images are utilizing secret hashtags to signal their presence and interest to each other. The hashtags # megalinks and # megadump are littered with tweets from otherwise empty accounts offering or soliciting illegal material.
One account offered a “megalink” for “£2 to my cashapp,” with one of the subsequent hashtags being “underage.” The video that accompanied the tweet was a screenshot that included a number of folders, one of which was tilted “CP,” short for “child pornography,” and another titled “500+teenie videos.”
These accounts are numerous, and Twitter does little to crack down on their existence in spite of reports.
Other users were more direct, asking specifically for “links” or “trades” of specific ages that interested them. One user requested 14-17 year olds.
Another sought to “trade links” for ages 12-17 years old. The trade would happen on Snapchat, another completely innocuous platform.
Multiple users are even seeking child pornography which includes rape and necrophilia themes, outright asking for the grotesque content while utilizing the “#young” hashtag.
The Post Millennial ’s findings are in light of increasing scrutiny towards Twitter for politicizing its platform, routinely censoring conservative, gender-critical feminist, and even some anti-mainstream leftist accounts. Despite the crackdown on political speech, the social media platform has altered its terms of service to accommodate “minor-attracted persons.”
According to the most recent manifestation of Twitter’s Child Sexual Exploitation Policy , “Discussions related to child sexual exploitation as a phenomenon or attraction towards minors are permitted. ”
Twitter has experienced a surge in accounts attempting to normalize and gain acceptance for “minor-attracted people” (MAPs) in recent years, many openly operating with impunity from Twitter under the Terms of Service.
Completely acceptable under the new guidelines are “artistic representations” of child pornographic images, of which many were found on accounts using the “minor-attracted persons” moniker in their usernames or bio spaces. One such drawing depicted a small child being raped by an adult man.
Others posted “soft-core” images of actual children, dressed-up and posed inappropriately. These images, primarily posted by foreign-language accounts, were immediately reported by The Post Millennial staff, and were pixelated to protect the identity of the victims.
Despite many “pro-MAP” accounts claiming they are “anti-contact” and simply striving for acceptance for immutable desires, MAPs are unabashed in expressing their disgusting desires towards children—all with the protection of Twitter’s terms of service.
Many of these accounts have gone unchecked and remain active–some even for years. As a social media platform that claims to protect its users, and even enjoys legal protections under US Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, Twitter needs to provide answers for why it continues to allow accounts dedicated to child sexual predation to proliferate in its space.
The Post Millennial has contacted Twitter for comment on their tolerance of pedophiles on the platform, and on whether concrete steps will be taken to stop the free trade of child sex exploitation material using covert hashtags.
According to a Twitter spokesperson, “Twitter has zero-tolerance for any material that features or promotes child sexual exploitation. We partner with organizations around the globe in this area, including the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. Our dedicated teams work to stay ahead of bad-faith actors and to ensure we’re doing everything we can to remove content, facilitate investigations, and protect minors from harm—both on and offline.”

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By BBC Trending What's popular and why
Despite attempts by social networks to clamp down on child porn, some Twitter users have been swapping illegal images and have used tweets to sexualise otherwise innocent photos.
They begin as innocuous selfies or pictures taken by friends or family members. But in the eyes of a small cohort of warped Twitter users, they become something else entirely.
"The pictures are usually young girls in their school uniform or a swimsuit," says Joseph Cox, a freelance journalist writing for Motherboard, part of Vice News. "Some have been taken by the girls themselves. It's not clear whether they've then sent them to a boyfriend who's uploaded them… others appear to have been ripped from their social media sites."
Cox's investigation into this underground world started with a search of one hashtag which threw up one of the otherwise innocent-looking photos.
"Users were asking to trade pictures of similar aged girls and they were commenting on her appearance and how attractive they found her," he says. "Some of the comments did get very explicit."
The pictures themselves are not pornographic but Twitter's guidelines are clear: child sexual exploitation isn't tolerated.
It's policy on the issue states: "When we are made aware of links to images of or content promoting child sexual exploitation they will be removed from the site without further notice." In addition, users face a permanent ban for promoting child sexual exploitation. Most of the posts that Cox found were later taken down by Twitter.
Hear more on this story - and more from the Trending team - on BBC World Service radio. Stream the programme or download our podcast .
But the murky world of comments and replies is not the only exploitation problem on the social network. One American woman who spoke to BBC Trending said she uncovered a huge amount of child pornography on Twitter after reading rumours about it on Reddit.
"There was a minimum 14,000 accounts involved in the creation, distribution or retweeting of child porn," says Molly (not her real name).
The victims? "Girls as young as five, and definitely under 15."
Molly, a game developer, says that once she started probing, it didn't take her long to uncover the network and see that sexual images of children were being swapped with startling openness.
Once she had found one account, "you click on their retweets and that opens up more accounts and it creates this rabbit hole where you just keep finding more and more child porn," says Molly.
Some of the images, she believes, appear to be produced by paedophiles, while others are nude selfies that young people have texted to one another.
Molly says she's reported the images to Twitter and the US Federal Bureau of Investigation. In addition, she publicly named and shamed the users sharing child porn. Twitter, she says, reacted quickly, shutting all the accounts down.
Other social networks have also clamped down on sexualised or sexual images of children. In 2011, Reddit had a similar issue with a forum called "Jailbait" - while many images being shared there weren't illegal, the site closed it down.
Cox, the journalist, says he was surprised by how openly people were talking about child exploitation in the posts he viewed.
"One account even ran a poll asking its followers: 'Hey how old are you?'" he says. "The vast majority said over 20 years old, so if that's accurate these are adults communicating and looking at these pictures."
In a statement, Twitter told BBC Trending: "We do not tolerate child sexual exploitation," and said it works with authorities and organisations including the Internet Watch Foundation in the UK to combat the exploitation of children.
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You can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending , and find us on Facebook . All our stories are at bbc.com/trending .
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Published August 5, 2020 1:34pm EDT
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Twitter responds to the incident, initiates investigation.
The hearing for the 17-year-old Florida teenager accused of hacking some high-profile Twitter accounts last month was hacked itself, with trolls streaming pornography on the teleconference call.
The call, held over Zoom, was "bombed" even as the judge overseeing the case, Christopher Nash, attempted to restart the hearing, Gizmodo reported. Nash was unable to and had to shut the hearing down, the outlet added.
Cybersecurity expert Brian Krebs, who listened in on the hearing, tweeted about the incident.
"How the judge in charge of the proceeding didn't think to enable settings that would prevent people from taking over the screen is beyond me," Krebs added. "My guess is he didn't know he could. This guy's reaction sums it up.
"[By the way], the pornhub clip was fairly tame. Imagine child p*** being streamed in a court proceeding," Krebs continued. "I'm sure I wasn't the only attendee video recording the hearing. Right there you'd be guilty of possession of CP. Judges holding hearings over Zoom need to get a clue."
The alleged hacker, Graham Clark, is accused of scamming Twitter users out of at least $117,000 in just a few hours, Fox 13 previously reported .
Bail for Clark was recently set at $725,000 and he was required to demonstrate that the money came from a "legitimate source," which came at the request of Darrell Dirks, the state prosecutor.
At the hearing on Wednesday, Clark's lawyers were attempting to lower the bond, while also pointing out his bond is significantly more than Clark is alleged to have received from the hack.
Attorney David Weisbrod, who is representing Clark, said his client should not have to provide the source of the funds he uses to post bail, citing the fact authorities had previously searched Clark's residence in August 2019 as part of a separate investigation, Bloomberg reported.
As part of that investigation, Clark eventually agreed to forfeit 100 Bitcoins, worth approximately $1.2 million at current levels, in accordance with an agreement with officials in Florida and California. Clark was not prosecuted and admitted no wrongdoing, Weisbrod added.
Nash did not make a ruling on the call for a lower bond prior to shutting down the hearing on Wednesday. However, Wiesbrod added after the hearing that Nash kept the bail amount, but removed the condition to prove where the funds came from, Bloomberg added.
Publicly available bitcoin records show that the account of the Twitter hacker received hundreds of transfers, totaling more than $100,000. The account had transferred out approximately half that amount, but experts cautioned that scammers sometimes appear to distribute money so that their accounts appear legitimate.
Clark is accused of being the mastermind behind the hack that took over approximately 130 accounts on July 15, including those of former President Barack Obama, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden , Elon Musk, Apple and Uber.
Following the hack, Twitter locked down and removed the fake tweets from the hacked accounts and temporarily disabled access for all “verified” accounts while the company investigated the breach.
"Zoom bombing" has increasingly become common during the COVID-19 pandemic, as much of the world works from home and operates via teleconferencing apps, such as Zoom.
In March, the FBI warned of a nationwide rise in “Zoom-bombing,” or video hacking, after it received multiple reports of conferences – and in some cases, online classrooms – being disrupted by pornographic, hateful images or threatening language.
In May, Fox News reported that Zoom would take actions to adjust settings and enhance security measures. The platform has seen a near 30-fold increase in users in just a few months, going from approximately 10 million users in January to more than 300 million in April.
Fox News' Brie Stimson, Bradford Betz and Louis Casiano contributed to this story.
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Users Looking for Child Pornography Are Gathering on Periscope, Twitter’s Forgotten Video Service
As 2017 wheezes to its merciful end and the social media titans reckon with growing backlash, Twitter’s largely forgotten video streaming app Periscope has gained an insidious second life as a hub for seekers of child pornography. Gizmodo’s search of the platform over the course of a single afternoon uncovered dozens of accounts—50 in total—which appeared to be soliciting sexualized images of minors, or in the worst cases, depicting it themselves.
Acquired by Twitter before launch to compete with a similar app named Meerkat, Periscope allows users to broadcast live videos—such as on-the-ground views of newsworthy events—which can then be shared and rewatched at a later date. Seamless integration with Twitter helped it debut in 2015 as one of the top 25 app downloads, according to analytics service App Annie. Though it’s better off than Meerkat, which shuttered late last year, Periscope has plummeted to the 968th most downloaded app as of December 12th.
The presence of bad actors using a derelict platform to traffic in child pornography is almost less surprising than the brazenness of their methods in doing so. 22 of the users spotted by Gizmodo opted for names which did little to hide their intent, with handles like “lovechildrin,” “girlpreteen,” or “addmegroupsCPplease.” (CP—sometimes further obfuscated as “cheese pizza”—is a well-worn shorthand for “child pornography”.) Slightly subtler accounts merely included bios like “Love Little Girls the younger the better” or “j’aime les jeune filles” (which means exactly what you think it does.)
Though Periscope claims to have “zero tolerance for any form of child sexual exploitation,” the images used as avatars by some users tell another story. Of the 50 accounts found by Gizmodo, nine displayed the genitalia of prepubescent girls, and six more depicted sexual penetration featuring what appeared to be minors.
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Many users that seem to reference a desire to share or view child pornography use their accounts’ bio section to ask for admission to private groups—a feature on Periscope where, as the name suggests, sets of users can broadcast only to each other—which explains why the profiles of these users, some of which claimed over 4,000 followers, all displayed a broadcast count of zero. The same is true of adult porn streamers who sometimes amass followings in excess of 100,000 despite sexual acts, legal or illegal, being explicitly prohibited by Periscope’s content guidelines , and whose videos are often recorded and reuploaded to forums like Reddit’s r/Open_Boobs. The most upvoted post in that community (which is dedicated to “info/media on Periscope chicks”) is titled “ DO NOT FUCKING POST UNDERAGE GIRLS IN HERE .”
Though not counted towards broadcast numbers, private videos can be rewatched later in the same way that public videos can be on Periscope, unless they are deleted at some point after the broadcast ends. If deleted, Peri
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