
Audio By Carbonatix
The development of a new app designed to reduce online viewing of child sexual abuse material has received £1.8m of funding from the EU.
It will be tested with volunteers who have sought help because they are drawn to illegal images and want to ensure they cannot act on their desire.
Installed on devices such as phones, the app will identify and block harmful images and videos from being displayed.
It's hoped it can help combat "growing demand" for child abuse images.
The Protech project is a collaboration involving organisations from the EU and UK.
The project's app - called Salus - is intended to work in real-time, using artificial intelligence to identify potential child sexual abuse material and stop users from seeing it. It will also use other more conventional techniques to block content.
The Internet Watch Foundation, an organisation that works to find, flag and remove child abuse material, will help to train the AI technology developed by the UK company SafeToNet.
Tom Farrell of SafeToNet, who worked for 19 years in law enforcement, told the BBC the app was not intended to be a tool to report users to the police: "People who are voluntarily looking to stop themselves seeing child sexual abuse material quite clearly wouldn't use such a solution if they believe that it was going to report them to law enforcement."
'Practical aid'
Volunteers who download the app will be recruited via organisations working with individuals seeking help because they are drawn to online child abuse images.
One such organisation is British charity the Lucy Faithfull Foundation, which operates a helpline for those who fear they may download illegal images and wish to stop. That includes a significant number of people who admit to being paedophiles, some of whom have already been convicted..
The foundation's Donald Findlater, said tools such as the new app could help individuals control their behaviour, adding: "it is a practical aid to people who recognise a vulnerability in themselves".

Members of the Protech project hope it could stem the "growing demand for child sexual abuse material online".
A new high of 30,925 offences that involved the possession and sharing of indecent images of children were committed in the year 2021/2022, according to the NSPCC.
Last year a report by the Police Foundation thinktank said that the volume of online child sexual abuse offences had "simply overwhelmed the ability of law enforcement agencies, internationally, to respond".
Project members who spoke to the BBC suggested that policing alone was not going to stop people downloading images.
Mr Farrell argues that the UK has arrested more individuals for possession of child sexual abuse material than any other country in the world since 2014 and in the process has identified some very serious offenders.
But millions of people still view images
"So arrest isn't going to be the solution. We think we can work on the prevention side and reduce the demand and reduce the accessibility."
'Pilot stage'
Many details of the operation of the app still need to be worked out. No AI is perfect and a balance will need to be struck between over-blocking - which would make legitimate use of a device difficult - and under-blocking - which fails to detect many abuse images.
Mr Farrell says the app will be tested in a "pilot stage" in five countries - Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, the Republic of Ireland and the UK with at least 180 users over an 11-month period.
And experts not involved in the project think the idea has promise.
Professor Belinda Winder of Nottingham Trent University said it was a welcome development that could support people who "want to be helped to resist their unhealthy urges, and who would benefit from this safety net".
As with all new tech tools, the devil would be in the detail and Prof Winder had questions about how it would work in practice but said: "It is a positive step in the right direction."
Latest Stories
-
IMF urges Central Banks to keep inflation in check
15 minutes -
H. Kwasi Prempeh raises concerns over Supreme Court’s handling of OSP constitutionality case
25 minutes -
Global childhood cancer cases soar
25 minutes -
Airline pilots fear retribution over refusing to fly in Middle East, aviators’ group says
26 minutes -
Police intensify security in Bosomtwe communities after deadly clash
34 minutes -
Corporate Income Tax contributes highest to 2025 petroleum revenue
36 minutes -
Ghana less exposed to global oil disruptions — Fitch
39 minutes -
Property rates: Stakeholders advocate digitisation, transparency, …
41 minutes -
Police officer killed in road crash at Atortorkorpe in Ada
41 minutes -
EKMA begins dredging major storm drains ahead of peak rainy season
45 minutes -
US has let in 4,499 refugees since October – all but three were South African
50 minutes -
Child Protection Units to be part of MMDA Performance Assessment
57 minutes -
Pub thief jailed over £2.2m Fabergé theft
1 hour -
Show us the money – COMAC CEO demands full disclosure on ‘dumsor levy’ windfall
1 hour -
Melania Trump denies ties to Jeffrey Epstein and urges hearing for survivors
1 hour