Child & survivor participation
See what the Alliance is doing on: Child & survivor participation
Hear us in the fight for our online safety

Online safety is important to us. Earlier this year, our Youth Council released an Open Letter, calling on the industry to stop putting profits ahead of safety.
A space to post #YOLO, not #MeToo

Make the internet a space where children learn about the virtues of society, not the ominous predators it harbours. A space where they post #YOLO, not #MeToo.
Why survivor voices and child-centred approaches should be core to prevention

Survivor voices and our experiences can be a powerful catalyst in taking better and informed steps to make the internet safer.
We have to break out of silence

We see that with emerging technologies come new threats, including theft of users’ personal data for the purpose of financial extortion or sexual exploitation.
Put children at the centre of new tech

The internet itself is great, but the risks associated with online predators pose a great danger to me and my vulnerable peers…
More than “Just Survivors”

Survivor’s voices only become meaningful when their ideas and voices impact material things, like legislation, policies and products.
There’s no line between real and virtual

When I started exploring cybersecurity I understood the line between the real and virtual was completely non-existent, especially for young users like me…
We Are Those Children: Statement from the Phoenix 11 in response to academics’ criticism of EU’s proposed CSAM-blocking policies
Publisher: Canadian Centre for Child Protection (Media)
A response to the letter issued by academics urging the EU to stop pursuing regulations that would reduce the availability of child sexual abuse material online.
Estimates of childhood exposure to online sexual harms and their risk factors
Publisher: WeProtect Global Alliance (Press release)
Press release on a study, conducted by the Economist Impact, exploring the experiences of 2,000 18-year-olds across four European countries.