Thank you for your question.
I am going to stay in the online lane, if I may. That's really our area of expertise.
You're right: There is definitely a gender-based violence component to the online harm space. The majority of child sexual abuse material that we see is often young girls and women, and even young adults at times, with non-consensual intimate image distribution.
There has been a bit of a hiccup in that trend recently: Online sextortion has flipped that notion on its head, in that it's almost entirely boys, for a number of reasons. It is primarily because the motivation isn't sexually driven but financially driven. Boys are falling prey to these sexual conversations online, and then they're being extorted. That is a more recent nuance. Absolutely, this is a gender-based violence component.
It's also marginalized groups that tend to be overrepresented in online harm, so I think it's really important that we have these systems in place, these comprehensive approaches to tackling these issues before they become crimes or before there is harm that happens.
Multiple times over the last hour, I've echoed this notion of a systems approach whereby we anticipate harms. At this point, after 20 years of social media, it's pretty easy to anticipate harms. We know what the tactics are. We know where the harms are and where the pitfalls are. Now it's just a matter of ensuring that those who control these digital environments are actually acting on this information.