The Australian Federal Police said in a statement that anonymous chat functions provided a platform for offenders who often create fake accounts to target children and young people.ĮSafety’s Mind the Gap research found about two in three teenagers have been exposed to violent sexual images and self-harm content online, while almost half of children have been treated in a nasty or hurtful way online. The eSafety commissioner has warned that reports about technology being “weaponised to abuse children” surged since the start of the pandemic. The Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation (ACCCE) has recorded a dramatic increase in reports of online child sexual exploitation, from 17,400 in 2018 to 33,114 in 2021. Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads “It’s been around since 2009 – I’ve always referred to it as the cockroach of the internet because it refuses to die.” “I felt like I had to bleach my eyeballs,” she says. Pendergast, the founder and chief executive officer of cybersafety program provider, was horrified when she tried it. Click, three young girls sitting on a bed in their pyjamas. You clock the stranger then chat or click and move on.
When Guardian Australia tried it, it was a whirlwind of man after man in darkened room, waiting.
Pendergast says it’s like a prank phone call – an illicit thrill, but this one’s dangerous.