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Thursday, 16 March 2006, 12:22 GMT

Sites selling child porn targeted

Dollars and keyboard, BBC/Corbis Net and finance firms are joining up to stamp out commercial child pornography.

The newly formed Financial Coalition Against Child Pornography brings together 18 organisations including Bank of America, American Express, Mastercard, AOL, Yahoo and Microsoft.

The group will share information about websites that sell child porn and stop payments passing to them.

The group aims to make it impossible to profit from selling child porn within two years.

Cash flow

As well as bringing together financial groups and net firms the coalition is also supported by the International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children (ICMEC), and the US National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC).

"Battling the proliferation of child pornography websites requires the efforts of many," said Baron Daniel Cardon de Lichtbuer, Chairman of the International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children. "Law enforcement around the world is engaged, but we must also disrupt the economics of this despicable business."

COALITION MEMBERS


The net had helped to make child pornography a multi-billion dollar business, said Lord Cardon de Lichtbuer because it made it easy to buy illegal images and videos using credit cards and other payment systems.

The organisations involved in the coalition aim to share information about commercial child pornography sites and ensure that payments for images are not passed on. It will also issue cease and desist notices to websites.

It is estimated that more than 200,000 websites seek to profit from child pornography.

"To eliminate the commercial viability of child pornography, we must stop the flow of money," said Ernie Allen, chairman of the coalition and president of ICMEC and NCMEC in statement announcing the formation of the group. "To do that, we need the involvement of the world's leaders in the payments industry and the internet."

Reports of child pornography passed to the US National Center for Missing & Exploited Children CyberTipline have increased from 24,000 reports in 2001 to more than 340,000 in 2005.

Net users who find child porn sites are encouraged to report them to local watchdogs. The website of the International Association of Internet Hotlines hosts lists of reporting organisations in many countries.




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Related to this story:
Online child porn ring 'smashed' (15 Mar 06 |  Americas )
Child porn site reports 'up 80%' (08 Mar 06 |  UK )
Web paedophile groomed victims (28 Feb 06 |  Lincolnshire )
BT sounds child web porn warning (07 Feb 06 |  UK )
How net providers stop child porn (07 Feb 06 |  Technology )
BT acts against child porn sites (08 Jun 04 |  Technology )

RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
Child Abuse
Internet Watch Foundation
International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children
International Association of Internet Hotlines (InHope)
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites



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