Posted: 2023-02-27 14:03:42

Underage Australians trying to scrub their nudes from the internet could soon find the job easier after one of the world's biggest social media giants revealed it was signing up to a new service designed to hunt down explicit images.

Meta, the company behind Facebook and Instagram, is joining Take It Down, a new platform which was developed by the National Centre for Missing & Exploited Children in the United States to help young people remove sexually explicit content of themselves.

While the platform is based in America, Meta's decision to take part opens the service up to millions of Australian users across both of its key social platforms.

The move comes as social media companies find themselves under increasing pressure to do more to fight child exploitation.

Australia's eSafety Commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, told the ABC that the move was a step in the right direction, but urged social media giants like Meta to do more.

"The service relies on user-reporting, rather than the companies proactively detecting image-based abuse or known child sexual exploitation and abuse material," she said.

"We maintain the view that companies need to be doing much more in this area.

"Image-based abuse has become the scarlet letter of the digital age … once these go up on the internet, it can be very insidious and be difficult to take down, particularly if you're trying to work on your own."

The new platform is open to anyone under the age of 18, or who holds fears about intimate images or video of themselves as a child.

julie inman grant speaks at a press conference
eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant says social media giants need to do more to protect vulnerable people.(ABC News: Adam Kennedy)

Take It Down's technology works by matching an underage user's images, whether they are similar or identical.

Young Australians who fear that their intimate photos or videos have been or will be splashed across the internet can securely put their content through a special algorithm which spits out a code.

That code is then shared with major online platforms like Facebook, Instagram, OnlyFans and Pornhub, which then delete the content if it is detected.

The code can be created without the content being uploaded and also works on deepfakes, which is when someone's likeness is superimposed on an existing photo or video.

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