Browse our reports, briefing and articles to learn more about the work we deliver and our impact on the online safety sector to protect children and young people from online harm.

Risk assessments are a cornerstone of the Online Safety Act, with online services required to produce ‘suitable and sufficient’ risk assessments for both the illegal and child safety parts of the regime.

A joint letter to Victims Minister Alex Davies-Jones outlining the case for a Duty of Candour to be extended to social media companies where they are suspected of being involved in a death.

Members of Families and Survivors to Prevent Online Suicide Harms wrote to Ofcom Chief Executive Melanie Dawes urging further enforcement action to tackle a pro-suicide forum.

Report setting out how a substance and suicide forum costs lives and the state missed countless chances to act (Oct 25)

Research briefing – October 2025

Molly Rose Foundation writes to Ofcom boss Melanie Dawes urging the regulator to hold Meta to account for failures under the Online Safety Act.

From July 2025, social media platforms have been required to comply with new measures set out in the Online Safety Act to protect children from harmful content.

Molly rose Foundation coordinated a letter to Ofcom to warn against Meta’s plans to automate 90% of its risk assessments.

This briefing sets out our initial assessment of Ofcom’s Protection of Children measures, which in our view fail to rise to the challenge of protecting children from algorithmically-driven preventable harm.