Posting your kid’s first-day-of-school photo used to feel harmless. Now the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) is asking parents to think twice, warning that publicly shared images of children are being harvested and twisted into AI-generated child sexual abuse material.
The advisory, issued jointly with the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) — the charity tasked with hunting down and removing abuse imagery online — lands against a grim backdrop. The IWF identified 8,029 AI-generated images and videos depicting child sexual abuse, a figure that lays bare how quickly generative tools have been weaponised.
The mechanics are as unsettling as they are simple. Freely accessible photos scraped from public social media feeds can be fed into image-generation models capable of producing convincing synthetic content. Innocuous holiday snaps, birthday posts and school-gate portraits become raw material. The technology that makes photo editing effortless for everyone also makes abuse imagery cheaper and faster to fabricate.
The guidance from the NCA and IWF is refreshingly practical rather than alarmist. The core message: reconsider the habit sometimes called sharenting — the reflexive public posting of children’s lives online. That doesn’t mean deleting every family photo, but it does mean rethinking who can actually see them.
- Lock down privacy settings so images reach known contacts rather than the open web.
- Avoid public posts of identifiable children, especially in school uniforms or tagged with location data.
- Think about permanence — once an image is public, control over it is effectively gone.
What makes this warning notable is the source. When a national law-enforcement agency and a frontline safeguarding charity jointly tell parents to change everyday behaviour, it signals that the volume of AI-generated abuse material has moved from theoretical worry to measurable problem. The 8,029 figure isn’t a projection; it’s a count of real content the IWF has already had to confront.
For the wider tech industry, the advisory is another flashpoint in the debate over generative AI’s guardrails. Image models are trained and deployed at a pace that safeguarding frameworks struggle to match, and much of the burden of prevention is landing on individual users — parents, in this case — rather than platforms or model developers.
The uncomfortable takeaway is that the same accessibility that made AI image tools a consumer phenomenon has a dark mirror. Until platforms and model makers build stronger friction into how images can be scraped and repurposed, the NCA’s advice amounts to damage limitation: the fewer public images of children circulating, the smaller the pool of material available to abuse.
It’s a sobering reminder that in 2026, sharing a photo of your child is no longer a purely personal decision — it’s a security one.