Australia’s online safety regulator blasted major technology companies including Meta Platforms Inc., Apple Inc. and Google for failing to stamp out child sexual exploitation and abuse on their services, even after repeated calls to address shortfalls.
Key failings include inadequate detection of live abuse during video calls and insufficient efforts to find newly-created material, Australia’s eSafety Commissioner said Thursday. The regulator criticized a lack of language analysis tools to pick up sexual extortion of Australian kids, even after companies were provided with common online indicators.
“It beggars belief that these have not yet been deployed,” eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said in a statement. “We have been engaging with these companies for a long time on these issues. It’s disappointing to see so little progress being made.”
Apple, Microsoft and Google didn’t respond to requests for comments. Snap Inc., the owner of Snapchat, said it will continue to work with eSafety on “this critically important issue” but didn’t address allegations the company hadn’t done enough to stamp out sexual abuse. Meta, owner of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, said it will review feedback from eSafety.
Global watchdogs are increasingly holding the world’s largest tech companies responsible for abuse on their platforms. Inman Grant said it was a matter of “corporate conscience and accountability.” Australia late last year also enacted a world-first social media ban for under-16s.
This report is auto-generated from Bloomberg news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.
Also Read: In India, growing debate over age restrictions on social media use by teens

