The cybersex industry is a billion dollar business around the world. And it is growing in developing countries like the Philippines, where more children are being abused because of rampant poverty and a growing cyber network. Ibabao is a sleepy seaside village located 500 kilometers south of the Philippine capital Manila. Everyone knows everyone in the village, and the family ties are strong. But things are not as idyllic as they look. In small bamboo huts and brick houses, children are forced by their neighbors or even their own impoverished parents to perform sexual acts in front of web cams. The videos, commissioned and paid for by people worldwide, are broadcast live on the Internet. The case is so lucrative that some villagers have abandoned fishing and factory work. But Ibabao is not an isolated case. In Southeast Asia, the cyber-sex industry is growing rapidly. In countries like the Philippines, Cambodia and Indonesia, abject poverty and growing digital infrastructure are contributing to its expansion.Free No Ads In 2015, Southeast Asia had more than 1.6 million Internet users. Human rights groups believe that tens of thousands of children in the Philippines are forced to perform sexual acts in cybercafés or at home. Some families have started the Cybersex business with only a laptop. They usually get between $ 10 and $ 100 per show – a big amount in a country where about 60 percent of the population earns only $ 2 a day. ‘Sweetie’ attracts pedophiles from around the world International demand is huge. The FBI estimates that in more than 40,000 public chat rooms around the world, some 750,000 people search for juvenile pornography 24 hours a day. Terre des Hommes, an international human rights organization , helped the authorities quit against more than 1,000 pedophiles in 2013. Activists from Terre des Hommes registered online . .
In just ten weeks, more than 20,000 litigants have contacted Sweetie from around the world. So far, three men in Australia, Belgium and Denmark have been convicted in the case. In 2012, the government passed a law making cybersex punishable in all its forms. But the implementation of the law is very weak. Philippine police, backed by Interpol, say they have arrested 58 alleged members of a cyber-sex extortion syndicate. Users around the world were tempted to expose themselves via webcams and were then blackmailed. (02.05.2014) High school students in Colorado were caught last
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