Skip to content
Government Federal

Live Online Child Abuse Still Accessible on Popular Video Calling Platforms

International Justice Mission Australia 2 mins read

5 February 2026

The eSafety Commissioner’s latest periodic transparency report[1] reveals big tech companies have made little progress in detecting live online child abuse in video calls, including in encrypted environments, in the first half of 2025.

eSafety found that tech companies did not apply tools across these widely used platforms or services to proactively detect live or new online child sexual exploitation and abuse:

  • Meta – Facebook Messenger & WhatsApp
  • Microsoft – Teams, OneDrive or Outlook
  • Google – Meets, Chat, Messages, Gmail
  • Apple, including Facetime
  • Discord
  • Snapchat

Unfortunately, Australia’s demand for livestreamed child sexual abuse is chilling. A recent report published by IJM in partnership with Childlight East Asia & Pacific Hub reveals that of 1,939 Australian men surveyed, 6.5% of respondents have or would livestream child sexual abuse.[2]

IJM Australia CEO, David Braga, said, “More must be done to protect children around the world from Australian offenders. eSafety’s latest report emphasises the urgent need for a robust digital duty of care that requires companies at every level of the tech stack to proactively detect and disrupt child sexual abuse material including in live video calls.”

“Some improvements were made by companies in detecting known and new child sexual abuse images and videos, and some response times improved in taking down child abuse material following reports, which is welcome progress. However, large gaps remain that continue to enable offenders in Australia to utilise popular video calling platforms to access and direct the livestreamed abuse of children.”

eSafety’s first periodic notice report on child sexual exploitation and abuse revealed in August 2025 that Microsoft was piloting AI-powered detection tools for Teams designed to identify and prevent potential new child sexual exploitation and abuse from being created or transmitted on live video calls. Surprisingly, no further progress on this trial is reported in this latest report. 

Philippine Network Survivor leader, Barbie, stated, “Traffickers exploit technology to abuse children, reaching across continents with ease. Tech companies are turning a blind eye to children being repeatedly sexually abused live on their platforms, apps, and devices by their users for other users to watch in real time.”

IJM Australia CEO, David Braga, said “The technology exists to stop this crime before it even happens. We’re calling on the Albanese Government to continue its commitment to child safety and to prioritise introducing a digital duty of care, which it announced it will legislate back in November 2024. A robust digital duty of care will require technology companies to act to prevent this harm on their platforms.”

 

Media contact: Briony Camp [email protected] 0468 308 696



[2] International Justice Mission & University of Nottingham Rights Lab (September 2023). Available from: https://assets-sea.ijm.org/documents/Childlight_IJM_PreventingLivestreamedAbuseofChildren.pdf

Media

More from this category

  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 16/02/2026
  • 07:53
Australian Conservation Foundation

Rich variety of wildlife and plants added to threatened list

Twenty-five plants (including a seaweed), five reptiles, one marsupial, a fish, an insect and a mollusc have been added to Australia’s threatened species list. They include: The lemuroid ringtail possum of north Queensland, which is highly vulnerable to global warming. As temperatures rise, the possums are forced to live at higher and higher elevations on their mountain homes in the Wet Tropics rainforests. The Glossy grass skink, which lives in Tasmania’s north-east and has been severely impacted by clearing and drainage of its swampy natural habitat for agriculture, urban spread and logging operations. The Mt Donna Buang wingless stonefly, is…

  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 13/02/2026
  • 11:29
The Climate Council

Another coal approval, more climate harm for Australians

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 13TH FEBRUARY 2026 TheAlbanese Government’s approval of the expansion and extension of Queensland’s Middlemount Coal Mine will lock in millions of tonnes of additional climate pollution and intensify heatwaves, bushfires, floods and cyclones. This is the Albanese Government’s 35th fossil fuel approval. The approval will allowMiddlemount Coal Mine to continue extracting up to 5.7 million tonnes of coal every year until 2053. The extension is expected to emit an additional 283,000 tonnes of climate pollution each year on average, up to 6.1 million tonnes in total – equivalent to taking almost 80 million flights from Sydney to…

  • Government Federal, Indigenous
  • 13/02/2026
  • 08:55
Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (AMSANT)

AMSANT welcomes new Closing the Gap investment as progress remains critical

The Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (AMSANT) today noted the Prime Minister’s annual statement on the National Agreement on Closing the Gap. It welcomes the Federal Government’s latest investments to build progress, particularly investment in health infrastructure and measures to reduce the cost of food in remote stores. AMSANT Chair Rob McPhee said these initiatives signal growing recognition of the deep and complex challenges facing Aboriginal communities in the Northern Territory. ‘We welcome the commitment to improve access to Aboriginal employment in the health sector, reduce the cost of groceries in remote communities, and strengthen support for services that…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.