The UK's NCA and IWF are urging parents to tighten social media privacy settings as AI tools make it easier to turn ordinary images into abuse material.
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Parents who post pictures of their kids online are being told to rethink the habit. The UK’s National Crime Agency and the Internet Watch Foundation have issued new guidance urging families to lock down their social media accounts, warning that publicly shared photos are increasingly being pulled and altered by AI tools to create child sexual abuse material.
The two organizations say most parents have no idea this is happening. Criminals no longer need to contact a child directly to generate such material. They can scrape an ordinary photo and run it through widely available nudify apps.
The NCA and IWF are not telling parents to stop posting images of their kids entirely, according to The Guardian. Their guidance focuses on limiting who can see those photos by making social media accounts private or sharing images within a “close friends” list. Parents are also being asked to check their accounts for old photos that could be misused, including photos posted by relatives or friends.
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Tim Wright, a senior manager at the NCA, said the changes only require a few simple actions. Lorna Sinclair, a child sexual abuse education manager at the agency, said many parents don’t take those steps because they don’t realize the problem exists in the first place.
The IWF says AI-generated abuse material rose 14 percent last year, with more than 8,000 confirmed images and videos identified in 2025 alone. Cases have included blackmail attempts against teenagers and school websites targeted specifically for photos of students’ faces, echoing findings from an earlier report on how generative AI has scaled abusive content online.
Even the IWF’s own technology chief admits the advice feels uncomfortable to give, since it puts the burden on families rather than the platforms or AI developers. Until stronger safeguards exist, tightening privacy settings may be the only real protection parents have.
Pranob is a seasoned tech journalist with over eight years of experience covering consumer technology. His work has been…
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