Trinity Mount Ministries

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Law, Legislation, and Online Child Safety: Progress in the War Against Child Exploitation

 


By Brett Fletcher

​The internet has evolved into a fundamental part of childhood, but it has also created an expansive digital playground for predators. For years, child safety advocates and law enforcement have fought an uphill battle against online child exploitation.

​However, we are beginning to see a massive shift. A wave of landmark legislation, renewed bipartisan political will, and unprecedented global law enforcement alliances are striking back against those who target children online.

Bipartisan Breakthroughs in the United States

​Historically, tech regulation has been a polarizing topic in Washington. But when it comes to the safety of children, lawmakers have found rare, powerful common ground.

​The KIDS Act Passes the House (June 2026)

​In a major milestone, the Kids Internet and Digital Safety (KIDS) Act passed the U.S. House of Representatives with a strong bipartisan 267–117 vote. The sweeping legislation packages 14 separate digital safety proposals to establish strict guardrails for online platforms, social media, and AI chatbots.

​Key provisions include updating the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) to protect teens up to age 17, banning targeted advertising to minors, and requiring AI chatbots to provide mental health resources and warn users they are not talking to a real human.

​"The KIDS Act creates strong protections with new rules for design features, default settings, and kids' privacy. We want to thank our colleagues for their strong vote to protect kids, empower parents, and hold internet platforms accountable."

Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.) & Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) in a joint bipartisan statement

​The Kids Off Social Media Act

​Further underscoring this unified front, the Kids Off Social Media Act was introduced with broad bipartisan support to protect youth from harmful algorithmic targeting.

​“Protecting kids online is not a partisan issue. Parents across America are sounding the alarm about the real harms social media is causing—from anxiety and depression to exposure to dangerous content. This bipartisan coalition reflects families nationwide who have been asking for help."

Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL)


​“As a pediatrician and a mom, I'm very worried about the impacts that screen time and social media are having on this generation... Our kids are not for sale. That's why I'm proud to lead this bipartisan legislation to set commonsense safety measures on social media use."

Congresswoman Kim Schrier, M.D. (D-WA)


​A United Global Front: Fighting "Network with Network"

​Online exploitation knows no physical borders. To shut down global predator networks and commercial live-streaming rings, international agencies are pooling their investigative power.

​Interpol, Europol, and CEPOL Joint Initiatives

​In 2026, Europol’s European Cybercrime Centre (EC3), Interpol, and CEPOL (the European Union Agency for Law Enforcement Training) launched highly coordinated operations to identify victims and target traffickers operating on peer-to-peer and darknet networks.

​"We shall be forever grateful to our law enforcement colleagues who dare to view child sexual abuse material (CSAM) in order to identify and safeguard children... Because 'it takes a network to defeat the network.'"

CEPOL, Europol, and INTERPOL Joint Training Directive


​ICMEC (International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children)

​For over 25 years, ICMEC has coordinated with tech giants, financial institutions, and global police forces to dismantle exploitation pipelines. Their reporting portals now give children in dozens of countries an active path out of harm.

​“Child protection is a shared and global responsibility. Every successful rescue, every new law, every training delivered is based on cooperation with law enforcement, education professionals, non-profits, commercial enterprises, Governments and other partners. We all stand together on this."

Stephen Kavanagh, ICMEC Secretary General

​How to Get Involved: Resources and Advocacy

​Protecting children is a collective responsibility that requires action from parents, educators, and community members. If you want to join the fight, here are leading organizations you can support or contact:

​🌐 International & Advocacy Organizations

​🚓 Law Enforcement & Reporting Portals

​🛠️ What You Can Do Today

  1. Contact Your Representatives: Let your lawmakers know you support robust, constitutional online child safety bills like the KIDS Act.

  1. Educate Your Family: Teach the children in your life basic digital boundaries—such as keeping personal photos private and never meeting online "friends" in person.
  2. Support Local Law Enforcement: Advocate for budget allocations that provide local police departments with the specialized digital forensic tools needed to track cybercriminals.

Support Our Mission to Protect Children

​Our daily efforts to track down missing children, educate parents, and push for stronger protective laws rely on the generosity of people like you.

​If you would like to support our advocacy and help us continue making the digital world a safer place for the next generation, please consider partnering with us:

  • Support Our Work Directly: You can make a secure donation to fund our active child safety outreach through our PayPal Donation Page.

​"Thank you for your prayers and support."

Brett Fletcher, Founder of Trinity Mount Ministries


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