Tech giants doing too little on abuse content, says Australian govt report

Apple and Microsoft don't pro-actively detect child abuse material stored on their iCloud and OneDrive services, despite the wide availability of identifying technology, the report found

privacy, online privacy, online school, internet for kids
The report highlighted their inadequate use of detection technology and response times that can stretch to days
Angus Whitley | Bloomberg
2 min read Last Updated : Dec 15 2022 | 8:09 AM IST
Global technology giants are doing too little to remove video and images of child sexual exploitation from their own digital platforms, according to an Australian government report.

Using new legislation, Australian e-Safety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant compelled firms ranging from Meta Inc.-owned Facebook to Microsoft Corp.’s Skype to disclose how they tackled the issue. The report released Thursday highlighted their inadequate use of detection technology and response times that can stretch to days. 

Apple Inc. and Microsoft don’t pro-actively detect child abuse material stored on their iCloud and OneDrive services, despite the wide availability of identifying technology, the report found. Neither company uses tools to detect live-streaming of abuse in video chats on Skype, Microsoft Teams or FaceTime, even though Skype is used extensively for this purpose, the report said.

Microsoft and Apple didn’t immediately respond to emails and calls seeking a response to the report.
“It is unacceptable that tech giants with long-term knowledge of extensive child sexual exploitation, access to existing technical tools and significant resources are not doing everything they can to stamp this out on their platforms,” Inman Grant said Thursday.

The typical time taken to remove content or ban a user after abusive material is reported ranges from 4 minutes at Snapchat to two days at Skype, according to the report.
 

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Topics :Apple Incchild sexual abuseMicrosoftcyber securityFacebookSkypeDigital platform

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