Lantern In November 2023, the coalition launched Lantern, a cross-platform signal-sharing program that allows participating technology companies to share information and threat indicators about accounts and content that violate their child safety policies with one another. This program operates using the open source ThreatExchange platform supported by Meta. Participating companies may use shared information to investigate activity on their own platforms before taking enforcement action. Initial participants included
Discord,
Google,
Mega,
Meta,
Quora,
Roblox,
Snap, and
Twitch. At launch,
Business for Social Responsibility (BSR) published a human rights impact assessment of the program, making 19 recommendations to mitigate risks to privacy, freedom of expression, and non-discrimination arising from cross-platform data sharing. The coalition published a public response to those recommendations. During a January 2024
Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on online child sexual exploitation, CEOs of Discord and
X both referenced the Technology Coalition in their testimony, with Discord's CEO noting the company was sharing detection technology through the coalition and
X's CEO stating the platform was applying to join Lantern. In August 2024, the coalition launched a financial sector pilot with
Block, Inc. and
Western Union as the first participants to determine whether sharing signals with payment platforms could help disrupt the financial flows associated with OCSEA. By April 2026, the coalition reported that Lantern had surpassed two million cumulative signals since its launch, with approximately one million shared in 2025 alone, and that participating companies had taken over 350,000 enforcement actions against accounts, URLs, and content identified through the program.
Pathways Launched in 2024, Pathways provides smaller technology companies with access to expert guidance, resources, and peer engagement to help them establish foundational child safety capabilities, targeting companies that may lack the internal capacity of larger platforms.
Safe Online Research Fund The Tech Coalition Safe Online Research Fund is administered jointly with the
Safe Online grantmaking initiative of the
Global Partnership to End Violence Against Children, one of the largest non-governmental funds dedicated to ending online child sexual exploitation and abuse. The fund supports independent academic and nonprofit research on OCSEA, with priority given to research generating actionable insights for the technology industry. == See also ==