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  1. In 2019, psychiatrist Lea Lis recommended that parents allow nudity as a natural part of family life when children are very young, but to respect the modesty that is likely to emerge with puberty. In Northern European countries, family nudity is normal, which teaches from an early age that nakedness need not be sexual.

  2. Families in need of extra income, are sending their own children to become 'cam-girls'. Philippines outlawed cybersex this year, but what happens when parents are the exploiting the children?

  3. Young people can send nudes using phones, tablets and laptops and can share them across any app, site or game, including during a livestream. It could include sharing them across devices using offline services like Airdrop or Bluetooth.

  4. The NSPCC’s service for children and young people, Childline, has launched the Report Remove tool with the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) to help young people remove nude images of themselves from the internet.

  5. Learn what steps you need to take to respond appropriately to incidents of sharing nudes or semi-nudes with our CPD certified elearning course.

  6. Our 3-hour CPD certified online course covers why children and young people may share nude or semi-nude images, the risks involved and what steps you need to take to manage incidents and respond appropriately. You'll learn about issues including consent, gender, additional needs and age variations, as well the latest legislation and guidance.

  7. Selling explicit and nude images online. Learn about the risks and how to support a child if they're feeling pressured to share or sell nude or explicit images online.