We can provide journalists with factual information, on the record interviews or background briefings to help tell the story of this innovative project and how it is working to combat child sexual abuse.

Protech brings together leading experts from the EU and the UK, from a wide range of backgrounds, including criminology, public health, developmental, clinical and forensic psychology, software engineering, child protection and internet safety. 

Testing what works and what doesn’t, and establishing the feasibility of using our safety tech into a viable prevention programme is vital for effective change. The app could prove to be a vital tool for the sustainable, long-term CSA content prevention.

Interviews

Our experts are available for interviews or comment to:
  • discuss the reasons why this type of technology is urgently needed;
  • explain how the safety tech will work and how it will be used;
  • detail the findings following the pivotal roll-out of the pilot.
To organise interviews or comment, please contact:
Cat McShane
Internet Watch Foundation Press Officer
+44 (0) 1223 61 87 52 | +44 07572 783 227
catherine.mcshane@iwf.org.uk.

Protech project FAQs

1
.

What is Protech?

The aim of the Protech project is to research, design and develop technology to stop people from viewing child sexual abuse content online.Videos and images of children’s horrific sexual abuse, and the global demand for it, has reached unprecedented levels on the internet and this safety technology will be designed for use on the devices of individuals who want to view child sexual abuse material. The safety technology could help stem the growing demand for child sexual abuse material online and help prevent the suffering of child sexual abuse survivors whose images continue to circulate online long after the abuse has taken place.

2
.

How is Protech funded?

The €2m (£1.8m) project is funded by the European Commission for two years via the EU Internal Security Fund and is being managed by the Commission’s Directorate General for Migration and Home Affairs (DG Home).

3
.

What does Protech stand for?

Preventing and Reducing the use of child sexual abuse material through On-device Technology.

4
.

Who is involved in Protech?

There are eight members in the EU/UK child protection consortium involved in the Protech project.

  • The project is led by Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin (CUB). CUB is one of the largest university hospitals in Europe. All of its clinical care, research and teaching is delivered by physicians and researchers of the highest international standard. The Institute of Sexology and Sexual Medicine offers lectures, studies and internships for students of all disciplines and engages in interdisciplinary research on human sexuality, i.e., dealing with biological, psychological and social factors of influence on human sexuality. In 2005 the Institute of Sexology and Sexual Medicine started the “Prevention Project Dunkelfeld” which has now developed into a nationwide network of outpatient clinics providing treatment for self-identifying and help-seeking individuals with a sexual interest in children.
    Media contact:
    Isabel Schilg, isabel.schilg@charite.de  
  • The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) helps victims of child sexual abuse worldwide by identifying and removing online images and videos of their abuse. IWF Image Analysts search for child sexual abuse images and videos and the IWF Hotline offers a place for the public to report them anonymously. The IWF is a not-for-profit organisation and is supported by the global internet industry.
    Media contact:
    Cat McShane, catherine.mcshane@iwf.org.uk
  • SafeToNet Limited is a cyber-safety company that has developed pioneering, award winning and patented technology that includes artificial intelligence to tackle key online threats such as cyberbullying, sextortion, grooming, abuse and aggression.
    Media contact: John John Brandis Arntzen, john-john.brandis-arntzen@safetonet.com
  • The University Forensic Centre (UFC) within the Antwerp University Hospital offers specialised outpatient treatment to individuals who committed deviant sexual behaviour and to individuals who have deviant sexual interests. In addition, the UFC operates as a support centre and provides scientific and logistic support to stakeholders tackling the issue of sexual offending in Flanders (Belgium).
    Media contact: Minne De Boeck, minne.deboeck@uza.be
  • Policing Institute for the Eastern Region (PIER) is a research institute within Anglia Ruskin University (ARU). Its vision is to improve policing through partnership in applied research, focusing on three areas – sexual offending, 21st century policing and extremism and counterterrorism. Its mission is to lead world class research, innovation and impact to improve policing practice. Ranked in the world’s top 350 institutions in the 2023 Times Higher Education World University Rankings, ARU is a global university.
    Media contact: Lucy Sheehan, lucy@extramilepr.co.uk
  • The Department of Developmental Psychology at Tilburg University specialises in life course development, developmental psychology and psychopathology, life events, cognitions and emotions, personality and short- and long-term transitions. In the field of forensic psychology, the department offers an undergraduate programme in forensic psychology and a clinical master's programme in forensic psychology. The research in the field of forensic psychopathology, aggression and personality, risk assessment, physiological research, longitudinal research on treatment effectiveness and treatment (innovation, such as virtual reality and e-health) is among the best in Europe.
    Media contact: Prof Dr Stefan Bogaerts s.bogaerts@tilburguniversity.edu
  • The Lucy Faithfull Foundation is the only UK-wide charity dedicated solely to preventing child sexual abuse. The Foundation works with adults and young people who have sexually harmed a child, or who are at risk of doing so, and works with their family members, professionals, and victims of abuse. The anonymous Stop It Now! helpline gives confidential advice, support and information to anyone worried about their own, or someone else’s, sexual thoughts or behaviour towards children:
    Media contact: Joseph Costello, jcostello@lucyfaithfull.org.uk
  • Stop it Now Netherlands (NL) is part of Offlimits (Centre for Expertise on Online Child Sexual Abuse). Offlimits believes that child sexual abuse is a preventable social problem that is best approached from a public health perspective, where all adults have a responsibility for prevention, including child sexual exploitation material users. Stop it Now NL’s key objective is the prevention of child sexual abuse by offering anonymous, confidential and free support through a helpline to anyone worried about their sexual feelings and/or behaviour towards minors. For example, people viewing child sexual abuse material or people who are at risk of or have committed sexual child abuse. Stop it Now NL refers people to the forensic outpatient centre de Waag. Next to de Waag, Stop it Now NL has contact with different outpatient centres, psychologists and sexologists throughout the Netherlands, to create the possibility to refer people in their own region.
    Media contact: Maaike Witlox m.witlox@eokm.nl
5
.

How will the technology work?

The unique technology being developed for the project by SafeToNet uses highly accurate machine learning in real-time to detect child sexual abuse images and videos. The safety technology will monitor both network traffic and images before they are viewed on the user’s screen in real-time, vital seconds before the material can be seen by human eyes. After being installed, the on-device tool will run silently unless sexual images of children are detected and blocked.

6
.

How will the safety tech identify child sexual abuse material?

The safety tech is trained to accurately identify child sexual abuse material and it is tested on rigorously assessed child sexual abuse imagery provided by the IWF and confirmed as criminal content by human assessors at the IWF Hotline. The IWF is providing a secure environment where the machine-learning software can be put through its paces and tested to correctly detect child sexual abuse material.

7
.

What is the safety technology called?

Salus is the name of the technology solution that has been developed to detect and block child sexual abuse material on an electronic device. It builds on existing technology developed by SafeToNet.

8
.

Who will use the technology?

The on-device tech will be deployed voluntarily, and users will have full knowledge of its purpose and its effect on their device. Volunteers will be individuals who fear they might offend against children and will be recruited through critical community prevention services at CUB, (UFC), the Lucy Faithfull Foundation and Stop it Now Netherlands.

The safety tool’s uniqueness lies in its user-centred design which will provide effective intervention and halt the viewing of criminal content before it is seen by the user.

9
.

What will make the tech suitable for the targeted user?

To help design the safety technology, interviews will be conducted with individuals at risk of viewing criminal content as well as professionals at prevention support level. The information gathered will provide the data needed to inform and support the project.

10
.

When will Salus be deployed?

To help design the safety technology, interviews will be conducted with individuals at risk of viewing criminal content as well as professionals at prevention support level. The information gathered will provide the data needed to inform and support the project.

11
.

What will make the tech suitable for the targeted user?

Once designed, the safety tech will be rolled out in a pilot stage in five countries: Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, Republic of Ireland and the UK. It will involve at least 180 users testing the software over an 11-month period.

SafeToNet will gather feedback from users and professionals while the pilot is ongoing and use it to further improve and adapt the software.

12
.

How will the success of the safety tech be evaluated?

The Department of Developmental Psychology at Tilburg University will evaluate the project and assess the feasibility of using the technology as part of an intervention programme in Europe. They will take on board recommendations from experts on how it could be effectively implemented as part of public health prevention schemes.

13
.

How will you trust the users of the software?

There are, and always will be, methods by which offenders can circumvent technology such as this. The important characteristic of our target group is that these will be individuals who want to take part, who want to get help and who have volunteered to do so. The project will target cooperative, potential or real users of child sexual abuse images who want to avoid starting or continuing viewing criminal material.

14
.

Will the police be informed if users search for criminal content?

We are not judging or criminalising the volunteers who take part in the pilot. We accept that effective prevention requires trust and cooperation of all parties. We know that a purely repressive approach to this phenomenon does not bring much relief on its own, therefore the Protech project can be a first crucial step in a more preventive approach which will provide an additional tool in the fight against child sexual abuse.

15
.

How is this technology unique, have there been similar projects?

While the intent behind Salus is similar to other prevention technologies, the difference lies in that all such existing products require humans to be content moderators rather than moderating content automatically.

For instance, some existing tech that monitors streamed video, regardless of the content of the video, opts to take a snapshot of the screen and upload the screen captures to servers for a human being to review and moderate the content.

Unless they have been legally allowed to do so, this in effect criminalises content moderators because capturing, transmitting and storing child sexual abuse material is a criminal offence.

Screen captures can also be easily prevented by most platforms which can mark an application as forbidding screenshots. For example, mobile banking applications will refuse to comply as the app is marked as containing sensitive information.

Salus is different as it fully employs machine learning to perform the content moderation. In the case of streamed video, the safety tech “watches” the video moments ahead of the user before it reaches the user’s screen. If and when it detects child sexual abuse material, the stream is terminated with immediate effect.

Another advantage with the Salus technology is that people who are at risk of viewing images can be connected with a human being who can support that individual in their efforts not to consume harmful and illegal content.

1. What is Protech?

The aim of the Protech project is to research, design and develop technology to stop people from viewing child sexual abuse content online.Videos and images of children’s horrific sexual abuse, and the global demand for it, has reached unprecedented levels on the internet and this safety technology will be designed for use on the devices of individuals who want to view child sexual abuse material. The safety technology could help stem the growing demand for child sexual abuse material online and help prevent the suffering of child sexual abuse survivors whose images continue to circulate online long after the abuse has taken place.

2. How is Protech funded?

The €2m (£1.8m) project is funded by the European Commission for two years via the EU Internal Security Fund and is being managed by the Commission’s Directorate General for Migration and Home Affairs (DG Home). 

3. What does Protech stand for?

Preventing and Reducing the use of child sexual abuse material through On-device Technology.

4. Who is involved in Protech?

There are eight members in the EU/UK child protection consortium involved in the Protech project.

  • The project is led by Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin (CUB). CUB is one of the largest university hospitals in Europe. All of its clinical care, research and teaching is delivered by physicians and researchers of the highest international standard. The Institute of Sexology and Sexual Medicine offers lectures, studies and internships for students of all disciplines and engages in interdisciplinary research on human sexuality, i.e., dealing with biological, psychological and social factors of influence on human sexuality. In 2005 the Institute of Sexology and Sexual Medicine started the “Prevention Project Dunkelfeld” which has now developed into a nationwide network of outpatient clinics providing treatment for self-identifying and help-seeking individuals with a sexual interest in children.
    Media contact:
    Isabel Schilg, isabel.schilg@charite.de  
  • The Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) helps victims of child sexual abuse worldwide by identifying and removing online images and videos of their abuse. IWF Image Analysts search for child sexual abuse images and videos and the IWF Hotline offers a place for the public to report them anonymously. The IWF is a not-for-profit organisation and is supported by the global internet industry.
    Media contact:
    Cat McShane, catherine.mcshane@iwf.org.uk
  • SafeToNet Limited is a cyber-safety company that has developed pioneering, award winning and patented technology that includes artificial intelligence to tackle key online threats such as cyberbullying, sextortion, grooming, abuse and aggression.
    Media contact: John John Brandis Arntzen, john-john.brandis-arntzen@safetonet.com
  • The University Forensic Centre (UFC) within the Antwerp University Hospital offers specialised outpatient treatment to individuals who committed deviant sexual behaviour and to individuals who have deviant sexual interests. In addition, the UFC operates as a support centre and provides scientific and logistic support to stakeholders tackling the issue of sexual offending in Flanders (Belgium).
    Media contact: Minne De Boeck, minne.deboeck@uza.be
  • Policing Institute for the Eastern Region (PIER) is a research institute within Anglia Ruskin University (ARU). Its vision is to improve policing through partnership in applied research, focusing on three areas – sexual offending, 21st century policing and extremism and counterterrorism. Its mission is to lead world class research, innovation and impact to improve policing practice. Ranked in the world’s top 350 institutions in the 2023 Times Higher Education World University Rankings, ARU is a global university.
    Media contact: Lucy Sheehan, lucy@extramilepr.co.uk
  • The Department of Developmental Psychology at Tilburg University specialises in life course development, developmental psychology and psychopathology, life events, cognitions and emotions, personality and short- and long-term transitions. In the field of forensic psychology, the department offers an undergraduate programme in forensic psychology and a clinical master's programme in forensic psychology. The research in the field of forensic psychopathology, aggression and personality, risk assessment, physiological research, longitudinal research on treatment effectiveness and treatment (innovation, such as virtual reality and e-health) is among the best in Europe.
    Media contact: Prof Dr Stefan Bogaerts s.bogaerts@tilburguniversity.edu
  • The Lucy Faithfull Foundation is the only UK-wide charity dedicated solely to preventing child sexual abuse. The Foundation works with adults and young people who have sexually harmed a child, or who are at risk of doing so, and works with their family members, professionals, and victims of abuse. The anonymous Stop It Now! helpline gives confidential advice, support and information to anyone worried about their own, or someone else’s, sexual thoughts or behaviour towards children:
    Media contact: Joseph Costello, jcostello@lucyfaithfull.org.uk
  • Stop it Now Netherlands (NL) is part of Offlimits (Centre for Expertise on Online Child Sexual Abuse). Offlimits believes that child sexual abuse is a preventable social problem that is best approached from a public health perspective, where all adults have a responsibility for prevention, including child sexual exploitation material users. Stop it Now NL’s key objective is the prevention of child sexual abuse by offering anonymous, confidential and free support through a helpline to anyone worried about their sexual feelings and/or behaviour towards minors. For example, people viewing child sexual abuse material or people who are at risk of or have committed sexual child abuse. Stop it Now NL refers people to the forensic outpatient centre de Waag. Next to de Waag, Stop it Now NL has contact with different outpatient centres, psychologists and sexologists throughout the Netherlands, to create the possibility to refer people in their own region.
    Media contact: Maaike Witlox m.witlox@eokm.nl

5. How will the technology work?

The unique technology being developed for the project by SafeToNet uses highly accurate machine learning in real-time to detect child sexual abuse images and videos. The safety technology will monitor both network traffic and images before they are viewed on the user’s screen in real-time, vital seconds before the material can be seen by human eyes. After being installed, the on-device tool will run silently unless sexual images of children are detected and blocked. 

6. How will the safety tech identify child sexual abuse material?

The safety tech is trained to accurately identify child sexual abuse material and it is tested on rigorously assessed child sexual abuse imagery provided by the IWF and confirmed as criminal content by human assessors at the IWF Hotline. The IWF is providing a secure environment where the machine-learning software can be put through its paces and tested to correctly detect child sexual abuse material. 

7. What is the safety technology called?

Salus is the name of the technology solution that has been developed to detect and block child sexual abuse material on an electronic device. It builds on existing technology developed by SafeToNet. 

8. Who will use the technology?

The on-device tech will be deployed voluntarily, and users will have full knowledge of its purpose and its effect on their device. Volunteers will be individuals who fear they might offend against children and will be recruited through critical community prevention services at CUB, (UFC), the Lucy Faithfull Foundation and Stop it Now Netherlands. 

The safety tool’s uniqueness lies in its user-centred design which will provide effective intervention and halt the viewing of criminal content before it is seen by the user. 

9. What will make the tech suitable for the targeted user?

To help design the safety technology, interviews will be conducted with individuals at risk of viewing criminal content as well as professionals at prevention support level. The information gathered will provide the data needed to inform and support the project.

10. When will Salus be deployed?

To help design the safety technology, interviews will be conducted with individuals at risk of viewing criminal content as well as professionals at prevention support level. The information gathered will provide the data needed to inform and support the project.

11. What will make the tech suitable for the targeted user?

Once designed, the safety tech will be rolled out in a pilot stage in five countries: Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, Republic of Ireland and the UK. It will involve at least 180 users testing the software over an 11-month period.

SafeToNet will gather feedback from users and professionals while the pilot is ongoing and use it to further improve and adapt the software.

12. How will the success of the safety tech be evaluated?

The Department of Developmental Psychology at Tilburg University will evaluate the project and assess the feasibility of using the technology as part of an intervention programme in Europe. They will take on board recommendations from experts on how it could be effectively implemented as part of public health prevention schemes.

13. How will you trust the users of the software?

There are, and always will be, methods by which offenders can circumvent technology such as this. The important characteristic of our target group is that these will be individuals who want to take part, who want to get help and who have volunteered to do so. The project will target cooperative, potential or real users of child sexual abuse images who want to avoid starting or continuing viewing criminal material.

14. Will the police be informed if users search for criminal content?

We are not judging or criminalising the volunteers who take part in the pilot. We accept that effective prevention requires trust and cooperation of all parties. We know that a purely repressive approach to this phenomenon does not bring much relief on its own, therefore the Protech project can be a first crucial step in a more preventive approach which will provide an additional tool in the fight against child sexual abuse.

15. How is this technology unique, have there been similar projects?

While the intent behind Salus is similar to other prevention technologies, the difference lies in that all such existing products require humans to be content moderators rather than moderating content automatically. 

For instance, some existing tech that monitors streamed video, regardless of the content of the video, opts to take a snapshot of the screen and upload the screen captures to servers for a human being to review and moderate the content. 

Unless they have been legally allowed to do so, this in effect criminalises content moderators because capturing, transmitting and storing child sexual abuse material is a criminal offence.

Screen captures can also be easily prevented by most platforms which can mark an application as forbidding screenshots. For example, mobile banking applications will refuse to comply as the app is marked as containing sensitive information. 

Salus is different as it fully employs machine learning to perform the content moderation. In the case of streamed video, the safety tech “watches” the video moments ahead of the user before it reaches the user’s screen. If and when it detects child sexual abuse material, the stream is terminated with immediate effect.

Another advantage with the Salus technology is that people who are at risk of viewing images can be connected with a human being who can support that individual in their efforts not to consume harmful and illegal content. 

16. What if Salus blocks content which is not criminal?

The machine learning software behind Salus is highly accurate but there is always a slim chance that content which is not classed as criminal might be blocked. Feedback from users in the pilot stage and those professionals supporting the project will help the software to constantly learn and improve. 

17. Will it block access to all pornographic content or only child sexual abuse content?

Accuracy levels for Salus are at their highest when both sexual abuse imagery and pornography are blocked. However, the designers will be led by user preference to understand and improve the technology so that it can be most effective for achieving successful prevention.

18. Will the technology work on all types of electronic devices and operating systems?

Salus is compatible with:

  • Android devices (running Android 8.1 or higher)
  • MacOS devices (running MacOS Big Sur 11.2 or higher)
  • Windows devices (running Windows 10 or higher)
  • iOS devices (running iOS 13 or higher / iPadOS 13 or higher).  

19. What about platforms that are end-to-end encrypted. Will the technology still work?

No, not in true, end-to-end encrypted content, such as WhatsApp, the technology is not guaranteed to work. However, for more common encrypted services, such as https, the Salus app can establish cryptographic trust with the user’s device and operates the connection on behalf of the user’s device. This enables the app to function as expected.  

20. When will the project end?

Protech is a two year project which launched in March 2023 and will conclude in March 2025.

21. Who is on the Protech Advisory Board?

The Protech Advisory Board is made up of international experts and stakeholders in their fields who will provide relevant victims, police, and industry expertise and advice. 

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