The UK-based group did not store the personal details of members of the Channel Islands' organisation, bosses said.
Towards the end of the week, this profile also seemed to start featuring more and more females either dancing or posing in suggestive ways on TikTok. They all had a similar appearance in terms of body shape and looks, with one post encouraging the profile to choose whether they prefer "the girl or the car" they were featured alongside.As a fictional gamer, Kai's profile generated a lot of screengrabs from different well-known video games.
In particular, the footage from the first-person shooter games were graphic and aggressive. Close-up stabbings with blood spurting out of opponents was a regular occurrence on YouTube.This profile also took us into the realm of mysterious audio stories about shocking subjects, including a mocked-up phone call on TikTok from a father telling his daughter to lock herself in her room because "your mum wants to kill you".Scrolling this account also showed a TikTok tutorial video of "how to steal" the metal statue from the front of an expensive car.
This account was probably the least concerning of the three boys in terms of what it was exposed to, but did see content that seemed to come out of the blue.There was another knife advert/review on YouTube, comparing blades of differing prices with how they cut an orange.
There was also an "anger level monitor", where the user was encouraged to do a test and see how angry they are.
Mr Wright, from online safety and security organisation SWGfl, said the experiment echoed the concerns his charity had raised, that "children can be exposed to harmful content, even when no risky search terms are used".A woman who 10 years ago wore charity clothes for a year to raise money for Cancer Research UK is doing it again in 2025.
Caroline Jones, 56, from Harpenden, Hertfordshire, began, in 2015 in memory of her mother Mary Benson, who died from breast cancer.
She wore clothes from theand posted her outfits on social media.