Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

Online Sexual Exploitation of Children

Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 21

www.fo8.dswd.gov.

ph DSWD Field Office 08 @dswdfo8 #DSWDMayMalasakit


#DSWDKalingaAtPagmamahal
“Every time I see someone looking at
me, I wonder if they know, if they’ve
seen the pictures.”
Online sexual exploitation of children
(OSEC) refers to child sexual exploitation
which is facilitated or takes place through the
Internet and other related media.
CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE MATERIAL

• preferred term of choice to "child pornography", refers


to the materials depicting acts of sexual abuse and/or
focusing on the genitalia of the child.
COMPUTER/ DIGITALLY GENERATED CHILD
SEXUAL ABUSE/EXPLOITATION MATERIAL
• encompasses all forms of material representing
children involved in sexual activities and/or in a
sexualised manner, with the particularity that the
material does not depict a real child, but rather an
artificially created child, using digital tools. It includes
what is sometimes referred to as "virtual child
pornography".
ONLINE GROOMING FOR
SEXUAL PURPOSES
• communicating with a child over the Internet
with one intention: to establish a relationship
with a child to facilitate either online or
offline sexual contact. It may include
manipulation or incitement to take part in
different forms of exploitative or abusive
sexual activities, such as performing sexual
acts in front of a webcam or the production
of child sexual abuse material or self-
generated sexual materials.
SEXTING
• process by which someone intentionally
shares sexually explicit messages, images or
self-generated sexualized images of
themselves. These images or videos are
often shared with other peers. There are
also many cases of "unwanted sexting". This
refers to the non-consensual aspects of the
activity, such as lack of consent in sharing or
receiving sexually explicit photos or
messages.
SEXUAL EXTORTION
• also called "sextortion", is the
blackmailing of an adult or a child with
the help of (selfgenerated) images of
that person in order to extort sexual
favours, money or other benefits from
him/her under the threat of sharing the
material beyond the consent of the
depicted person (e.g. posting images on
social media or sending them to family
members).
LIVE ONLINE CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE OR LIVE
STREAMING OF CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE
• In general, offenders watching the sexual abuse of children online
gain access through middle parties. Sometimes these
intermediaries are a child's family member or people from the
child's community, who force or manipulate the child to 'perform'
in front of a webcam. An agreement is reached on a time and date
when the offender will log in to view the abuse using a platform
that supports streaming live content such as Skype. Appointments
can be made using chat messages, email or phone, with both
parties agreeing on the price the viewer will pay. Very often, this
will be paid in small amounts to avoid suspicion.
EXHIBIT REGRESSIVE BEHAVIOURS
• (e.g. thumb-sucking and bedwetting in younger children)
• sleep disturbances, eating problems
• behaviour and/or performance problems at school
• unwillingness to participate in school or social activities
LONG-TERM COMPLICATIONS
• emotional and physical symptoms such as immune deficiency,
chromosome erosion and missing brain tissue17 or might even
commit suicide. The idea of being visually exposed permanently
online, ignoring a child's right to be forgotten can be a traumatic
factor for most victims.
• victims may also experience traumatic sexualisation, or the shaping
of their sexuality in 'developmentally inappropriate' and
'interpersonally dysfunctional' ways.This type of trauma can also
cause an abused child to learn to use sexual behaviour as a tool to
gain affection, attention or gifts and privileges. It can also occur when
child victims internalise and display the misconceptions, distorted
sexual views that have been communicated to them by offenders.

You might also like