The festival, which launches as New York City’s Tribeca Film Festival winds down, leverages the power of AI to create 85 million movie posters, representing each piece of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) reported in 2021. When all 85 million pieces of CSAM are added together they make up more content than all the world’s film festivals combined. The spectacle aims to spark a necessary change following a 30 per cent increase in CSAM content from 2020 to 2021 – that is one piece of CSAM being uploaded every two seconds.
The titles and taglines are taken from real CSAM survivor accounts of how this material has profoundly affected all aspects of their lives, and how its continued availability only compounds the trauma and threatens their safety.
The initiative aims to capture global attention and demand all tech organizations and governments to step up. Currently, there are no Western democracies, including Canada, that C3P is aware of that have legislated that tech must proactively scan for known CSAM.
The Unwanted Film Festival brings awareness to the prevalence of CSAM online and the speed at which it is growing globally. Kicking off with a two-day installation in New York, and available globally at unwantedfilmfest.com, the experience generates film posters every two seconds to reflect the rate at which CSAM was uploaded online in 2021, much of which can be found on platforms we use every day.
The Unwanted Film Festival posters are being displayed in the five most spoken languages around the world: English, French, Mandarin, Hindi, and Spanish to reflect this global issue. Additionally, titles will be featured in German as the festival travels to the G7 conference in Germany, bringing the urgent issue to its international leaders who are in the position to make change. Finally, the festival will wrap up in Toronto for the Toronto International Film Festival in the fall.
Now is the time to slow the rampant escalation of CSAM which, if it continues at this growth rate, could reach upwards of 110 million reported images by the end of 2022. To learn more and join the fight, the public can demand change by visiting unwantedfilmfest.com to sign the petition to stand with survivors and demand that tech organizations stop the upload of known CSAM around the globe.
You can view a trailer below:
About the Canadian Centre for Child Protection: The Canadian Centre for Child Protection (C3P) is a national charity dedicated to the personal safety of all children. The organization’s goal is to reduce the sexual abuse and exploitation of children through programs, services, and resources for Canadian families, educators, child-serving organizations, law enforcement, and other parties. C3P also operates Cybertip.ca, Canada’s national tipline to report child sexual abuse and exploitation on the internet, and Project Arachnid, a web platform designed to detect known images of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) on the clear and dark web and issue removal notices to industry.
The Canadian Centre For Child Protection Introduces The Largest Unwanted Film Festival Unveiling The True Scale Of Online Child Sexual Abuse Material
Posted in Commentary with tags Canadian Centre for Child Protection on June 15, 2022 by itnerd**The following contains sensitive material featuring stories of sexual abuse and child sexual abuse materials**
Today, the Canadian Centre for Child Protection (C3P) unveiled The Unwanted Film Festival; the world’s largest festival which never ends, plays in plain sight, and features children forcibly turned into public figures.
The festival, which launches as New York City’s Tribeca Film Festival winds down, leverages the power of AI to create 85 million movie posters, representing each piece of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) reported in 2021. When all 85 million pieces of CSAM are added together they make up more content than all the world’s film festivals combined. The spectacle aims to spark a necessary change following a 30 per cent increase in CSAM content from 2020 to 2021 – that is one piece of CSAM being uploaded every two seconds.
The titles and taglines are taken from real CSAM survivor accounts of how this material has profoundly affected all aspects of their lives, and how its continued availability only compounds the trauma and threatens their safety.
The initiative aims to capture global attention and demand all tech organizations and governments to step up. Currently, there are no Western democracies, including Canada, that C3P is aware of that have legislated that tech must proactively scan for known CSAM.
The Unwanted Film Festival brings awareness to the prevalence of CSAM online and the speed at which it is growing globally. Kicking off with a two-day installation in New York, and available globally at unwantedfilmfest.com, the experience generates film posters every two seconds to reflect the rate at which CSAM was uploaded online in 2021, much of which can be found on platforms we use every day.
The Unwanted Film Festival posters are being displayed in the five most spoken languages around the world: English, French, Mandarin, Hindi, and Spanish to reflect this global issue. Additionally, titles will be featured in German as the festival travels to the G7 conference in Germany, bringing the urgent issue to its international leaders who are in the position to make change. Finally, the festival will wrap up in Toronto for the Toronto International Film Festival in the fall.
Now is the time to slow the rampant escalation of CSAM which, if it continues at this growth rate, could reach upwards of 110 million reported images by the end of 2022. To learn more and join the fight, the public can demand change by visiting unwantedfilmfest.com to sign the petition to stand with survivors and demand that tech organizations stop the upload of known CSAM around the globe.
You can view a trailer below:
About the Canadian Centre for Child Protection: The Canadian Centre for Child Protection (C3P) is a national charity dedicated to the personal safety of all children. The organization’s goal is to reduce the sexual abuse and exploitation of children through programs, services, and resources for Canadian families, educators, child-serving organizations, law enforcement, and other parties. C3P also operates Cybertip.ca, Canada’s national tipline to report child sexual abuse and exploitation on the internet, and Project Arachnid, a web platform designed to detect known images of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) on the clear and dark web and issue removal notices to industry.
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