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This photo taken on October 14, 2025 shows Chris Fields, CMO of AI-powered age verification start-up Yoti, giving a demonstration of the company's age verification technology at their offices in London. As governments crack down on online platforms from social networks to porn sites, business is booming for a specialist sector offering AI age checks based on selfies. (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP via Getty Images) / TO GO WITH Britain-Technology-internet-biometrics-children,FOCUS by Olivier DEVOS and Mona GUICHARD
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This photo taken on October 14, 2025 shows Chris Fields, CMO of AI-powered age verification start-up Yoti, giving a demonstration of the company's age verification technology at their offices in London. As governments crack down on online platforms from social networks to porn sites, business is booming for a specialist sector offering AI age checks based on selfies. (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP via Getty Images) / TO GO WITH Britain-Technology-internet-biometrics-children,FOCUS by Olivier DEVOS and Mona GUICHARD
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This photo taken on October 14, 2025 shows Robyn Tombs, CEO of AI-powered age verification start-up Yoti, posing at their offices in London. As governments crack down on online platforms from social networks to porn sites, business is booming for a specialist sector offering AI age checks based on selfies. (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP via Getty Images) / TO GO WITH Britain-Technology-internet-biometrics-children,FOCUS by Olivier DEVOS and Mona GUICHARD
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This photo taken on October 14, 2025 shows Robyn Tombs, CEO of AI-powered age verification start-up Yoti, posing at their offices in London. As governments crack down on online platforms from social networks to porn sites, business is booming for a specialist sector offering AI age checks based on selfies. (Photo by HENRY NICHOLLS / AFP via Getty Images) / TO GO WITH Britain-Technology-internet-biometrics-children,FOCUS by Olivier DEVOS and Mona GUICHARD
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A medical technology support team member, places a pair of goggles on the face of a Palestinian youth, as the boys ready to experience virtual reality part of a medical technology initiative in the city of Al-Zawayda, in the central Gaza Strip on November 30, 2025, featuring therapy sessions using virtual reality technology, due to the war sparked by Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, and Israel's retaliatory assault on the Gaza Strip. Children, traumatised by war have been given virtual reality headsets, to transport them from scenes of destruction to green gardens, tranquil beaches, and safe cities, with the aim of helping to alleviate the psychological trauma they endure daily. These sessions rely on programs specifically designed for traumatised children, taking into account their physical and psychological condition and helping them rebuild positive perceptions of the world. (Photo by Eyad Baba / AFP via Getty Images) *** BESTPIX ***
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Palestinian children wearing goggles and holding a joy stick experience virtual reality as a medical technology support team launches an initiative in the city of Al-Zawayda, in the central Gaza Strip on November 30, 2025, featuring therapy sessions using virtual reality technology, introduced due to the two-year-old war that was sparked by the Palestinian militant group Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, and Israel's retaliatory assault on the Gaza Strip. Children, traumatised by war have been given virtual reality headsets, to transport them from scenes of destruction to green gardens, tranquil beaches, and cities brimming with games, with the aim of helping to alleviate the psychological trauma they endure daily. One of the medical technology team members said the idea stemmed from the need to "change the harsh reality that children live in, even if only for a few hours, by giving them a chance to feel safe and joyful." These sessions rely on programs specifically designed for traumatised children, taking into account their physical and psychological condition and helping them rebuild positive perceptions of the world. (Photo by Eyad Baba / AFP via Getty Images)
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TOPSHOT - A Palestinian child sitting in a wheelchair wearing goggles and holding a joy stick experiences virtual reality as a medical technology support team launches an initiative in the city of Al-Zawayda, in the central Gaza Strip on November 30, 2025, featuring therapy sessions using virtual reality technology, introduced due to the two-year-old war that was sparked by the Palestinian militant group Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, and Israel's retaliatory assault on the Gaza Strip. Children, traumatised by war have been given virtual reality headsets, to transport them from scenes of destruction to green gardens, tranquil beaches, and cities brimming with games, with the aim of helping to alleviate the psychological trauma they endure daily. One of the medical technology team members said the idea stemmed from the need to "change the harsh reality that children live in, even if only for a few hours, by giving them a chance to feel safe and joyful." These sessions rely on programs specifically designed for traumatised children, taking into account their physical and psychological condition and helping them rebuild positive perceptions of the world. (Photo by Eyad Baba / AFP via Getty Images)
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Palestinian children wearing goggles and holding a joy stick experience virtual reality as a medical technology support team launches an initiative in the city of Al-Zawayda, in the central Gaza Strip on November 30, 2025, featuring therapy sessions using virtual reality technology, introduced due to the two-year-old war that was sparked by the Palestinian militant group Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on Israel, and Israel's retaliatory assault on the Gaza Strip. Children, traumatised by war have been given virtual reality headsets, to transport them from scenes of destruction to green gardens, tranquil beaches, and cities brimming with games, with the aim of helping to alleviate the psychological trauma they endure daily. One of the medical technology team members said the idea stemmed from the need to "change the harsh reality that children live in, even if only for a few hours, by giving them a chance to feel safe and joyful." These sessions rely on programs specifically designed for traumatised children, taking into account their physical and psychological condition and helping them rebuild positive perceptions of the world. (Photo by Eyad Baba / AFP via Getty Images)


