Among the biggest parents’ concerns whose children own smartphones, of course, must know that there is a whole panic of nude content on the Internet who are stumbling across them. It is likely that more problems are still thought that their precious children may be tempted to make such content themselves.
For the past few years, the Finnish phone maker HMD has been on a mission to make phone ownership a safe possibility for children through its better phones project-and may have been a solution to calm the nerves of the relevant parent.
On Wednesday, the company unveiled the HMD fuse phones, which prevents the built-in AI from seeing and saving sexual images in order to prevent children from filming and sending nude content-even inside a live.
“This is more than a product,” said James Robinson, vice president of HMD Family. “This is a safety net, a statement and response of the intention.”
The AI (called the Herm Block Plus) was created by CyberScureti Cefetonton and was embedded in the phone (including the camera), which, according to HMD, makes it impossible to bypass. Apparently it is morally trained on 22 million harmful nude images and operates offline.
“Hormu’s block plus cannot be removed, cheated, or working around,” said Richard Parsi, founder of the cofitonate. “It doesn’t collect personal data. It protects with zero disorders at all times, in every app, including VPNS.”
Parental control, which is available on Fusion X1, introduced by HMD in MWC in March, will also allow monitoring and management of the use of the child’s phone. When the baby grows up and needs more freedom, it can be left behind.
This phone is being launched exclusively on Vodafone in the UK, where the recent introduction to the online safety Act means that under -age verification rules are now needed to prevent minors from accessing harmful materials online.
It costs a month of 33 months, which will be 30 -Front Front fees and is launched in other countries starting from Australia in the coming months. There is no indication that the fuse will go to the United States, where the company has surpassed its operations in the past few months.


