79 arrested after Europol shuts down massive child porn platform.
Credit: REMKO DE WAAL / Contributor | AFP
Europol has shut down one of the largest dark web pedophile networks in the world, prompting dozens of arrests worldwide and threatening that more are to follow.
Launched in 2021, KidFlix allowed users to join for free to preview low-quality videos depicting child sex abuse materials (CSAM). To see higher-resolution videos, users had to earn credits by sending cryptocurrency payments, uploading CSAM, or "verifying video titles and descriptions and assigning categories to videos."
Europol seized the servers and found a total of 91,000 unique videos depicting child abuse, "many of which were previously unknown to law enforcement," the agency said in a press release.
KidFlix going dark was the result of the biggest child sexual exploitation operation in Europol's history, the agency said. Operation Stream, as it was dubbed, was supported by law enforcement in more than 35 countries, including the United States.
Nearly 1,400 suspected consumers of CSAM have been identified among 1.8 million global KidFlix users, and 79 have been arrested so far. According to Europol, 39 child victims were protected as a result of the sting, and more than 3,000 devices were seized.
Police identified suspects through payment data after seizing the server. Despite cryptocurrencies offering a veneer of anonymity, cops were apparently able to use sophisticated methods to trace transactions to bank details. And in some cases cops defeated user attempts to hide their identities—such as a man who made payments using his mother's name in Spain, a local news outlet, Todo Alicante, reported. It likely helped that most suspects were already known offenders, Europol noted.
"The online world is not anonymous," Europol warned. "Most of the suspects identified in Operation Stream were matched against records in Europol’s databases, proving that most offenders engaged in child sexual exploitation are repeat offenders and are not unknown to law enforcement authorities."
Arrests spanned the globe, including 16 in Spain, where one computer scientist was found with an "abundant" amount of CSAM and payment receipts, Todo Alicante reported. Police also arrested a "serial" child abuser in the US, CBS News reported.
"Some of those arrested not only uploaded and watched videos but also abused children," Europol said, while confirming that "the investigation is ongoing," making it appear likely that more arrests could follow.
More arrests could prevent more abuse. In Germany, cops conducted raids in nearly 100 locations. Guido Limmer, the deputy head of the Bavarian Criminal Police, told CBS News that a 36-year-old German man was among those arrested. He not only allegedly searched for CSAM on KidFlix but "offered his young son for games," Limmer said.
Other users potentially uploaded fake child sex images generated by artificial intelligence, as police found AI CSAM on one suspect's devices, Todo Alicante reported. Law enforcement globally has warned that a flood of AI CSAM is making it harder to identify real victims, which could complicate Europol's task of protecting more kids through its ongoing investigation.