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These trends are making the spread of child sex abuse worse, according to a child safety advocate



Ava says that one day she met a boy who she thought liked her.


He asked her to do a video chat. She agreed. But she did not agree for him to record the chat, which became sexual in nature, nor did she consent to him to then share the video.


The video spread like wildfire.


“I thought that this boy must really like me, but as I later found out this was very premeditated,” said Ava, who was 14 at the time and used a pseudonym to protect her identity. Ava shared her story through a video on the Canadian Centre for Child Protection’s website.


“He knew what he was doing, he recorded the video call and sent it to a friend who sent it to another friend who sent it to another friend and eventually it got sent to everyone on this website and then it was shared to other websites, porn sites, random pages from different countries,” she said.



She soon would spend much of her free time after school on her laptop.


The child sex abuse survivor says she was filing requests for websites to take down the sexual exploitative videos of her. At the same time, she was receiving messages from “random creeps.”


“It becomes the only thing you can think about, the only thing you care about,” Ava said. “I had no time for anything else because I very quickly realized that at the time if I wasn’t going to do anything, no one would do anything.”


She said the nightmare of “constantly retraumatizing” herself searching for the video ended when she connected with the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, which developed the Project Arachnid digital tool in 2017.


For the past eight years, the Winnipeg-based charity has deployed “web crawlers” to search for publicly available child sexual abuse images and video on both the normal internet and the dark web. The dark web is where online activity is kept anonymous. The charity also gets tips from the public about secret groups, such as those on Facebook or WhatsApp, where the content may be shared.


“It’s this perverse game of whack-a-mole that happens across the internet,” Jacques Marcoux, director of research and analytics with the Canadian Centre for Child Protection (C3P) in Winnipeg, said in a video interview with CTVNews.ca. “So what we see is that a lot of service providers who don’t want to have to deal with that problem will purposefully design their site in such a way that it’s hard to report content to them or that there’s no abuse contact email.”


Marcoux says the charity uses its tool to find any “highly sexualized images” of children, even those who are still wearing clothing, that may be considered “lawful but awful.”