Former detective and cyber safety expert Brett Lee saw the horrors of child exploitation firsthand while working undercover.
Detective Inspector Chris Toohey says parents and children need to be aware that stranger danger doesn't just happen on the streets. "They spend a lot of time learning about children's behaviours and what the latest trends are," he said.Conrad Townson is the top advisor for Project Paradigm, a Queensland anti-exploitation group.
This time last year, the Australian e-Safety Commissioner dispatched legal notices to Google, Twitter, TikTok, Discord and Twitch in relation to child sexual exploitation and abuse, and sexual extortion. Similar notices had been previously sent to Apple, Microsoft, Skype, Facebook and Instagram's owners Meta, WhatsApp, Snap and Omegle in relation to child sexual exploitation and the work each were doing to reduce it.The impact this work has on predators is close to impossible to measure.
Mr Townson also pointed to the level of media coverage on grooming and online abuse, an issue he said was close to invisible even five years ago. "For a lot of parents, they may not know what online grooming looks like, they haven't experienced that or lived through it, so it's a foreign concept," Detective Superintendent Jay said.Brett Lee has three strategies parents and carers can adopt immediately that he says will help protect their children.
"We have a right to know where our kids are going, who they're communicating with and we have a right to help them manage the world that they're in," he said.Why bonding, not banning, can help
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