MANILA (March 6) — In just one month, telecom giant PLDT and its wireless arm Smart Communications blocked 83,000 attempts to open online child sexual abuse or exploitation materials (CSAEMs) — a figure that underscores how persistent the digital threat to Filipino children has become.
The company disclosed Thursday that the January crackdown was made possible by upgraded blocking tools that intercept illicit content at the specific URL or digital “hash” level — instead of shutting down entire websites.
“Unlike traditional filters that block whole sites, the system pinpoints and blocks the exact abusive material,” said PLDT-Smart First Vice President Roby Alampay, adding that users are redirected to a warning page without disrupting legitimate content.
A troubling signal
While the company framed the figure as proof of proactive enforcement, the number also highlights the scale of attempted access to exploitative content within Philippine networks.
The blocked materials included blacklisted URLs, images, and hidden child abuse files circulating across various platforms — content often shared in encrypted or hard-to-detect channels.
PLDT-Smart said its system is strengthened by global intelligence feeds from groups such as the Internet Watch Foundation and the Canadian Centre for Child Protection through Project Arachnid, which continuously scans and flags known abusive material.
Beyond tech solutions?
Child protection advocates have long warned that blocking access, while crucial, addresses only one layer of the problem. The Philippines has been identified in past global reports as a hotspot for online sexual abuse and exploitation of children (OSAEC), often linked to poverty, weak enforcement, and organized cybercrime networks.
PLDT-Smart pointed to its collaboration with the Council for the Welfare of Children through the MAKABATA helpline 1383. In 2024, the helpline received over a thousand reports involving sexual, physical, and psychological abuse — cases that required coordination with law enforcement and social services.
The company also highlighted its role in supporting “Unified 911,” developed with the Department of the Interior and Local Government and the Bureau of Fire Protection, which integrates emergency response systems nationwide.
A national fight
Last December, the National Coordination Center Against OSAEC and CSAEM rolled out a three-year strategic roadmap approved by the Inter-Agency Council Against Trafficking, focusing on prevention, prosecution, protection, and partnerships.
Still, the January tally raises urgent questions for online communities: Who is attempting to access this content? How are children being protected beyond blocking tools? And are enforcement efforts keeping pace with evolving digital networks?
For parents, educators, and young users, the 83,000 figure is both a sign of active monitoring — and a stark reminder that the battle for safer digital spaces remains far from over.