Telegram is taking a significant step to reduce child sexual abuse material (CSAM), partnering with the International Watch Foundation (IWF) four months after the former’s founder and CEO Pavel Durov was arrested. The French authorities issued 12 charges against Durov in August, including complicity in “distributing, offering or making available pornographic images of minors, in an organized group” and “possessing pornographic images of minors.”
The UK-based IWF works with social media platforms, tech companies, governments and more to prevent the spread of CSAM. Telegram’s membership to the IWF grants it access to the organization’s tools that block links to CSAM content and “non-photographic depictions,” including AI-created images. It also provides Telegram with hashes of known CSAM content and any harmful content the organization detects. The IWF reports having found thousands of confirmed instances of CSAM on Telegram since 2022.
Telegram has previously refused to join any programs that could help limit CSAM. In a release, Telegram’s Head of Press and Media Relations Remi Vaughn claimed the platform “removes hundreds of thousands of child abuse materials each month” through reports and moderation through AI, hash-matching and more. Though Vaughn conceded IWF’s support will strengthen the company’s ability to delete CSAM before it reaches anyone.
Telegram has taken other steps since Durov’s arrest, announcing in September that it would hand over IP addresses and phone numbers in legal requests — something it fought in the past. Durov must remain in France for the foreseeable future.
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