Online Safety Conference 2026: Protecting Children and Young People from Online Harm

Online

Thank You

Our 2026 conference has now taken place. Thank you to everyone who spoke, attended, and supported The Online Safety Conference 2026.

We are already looking ahead to next year’s conference, taking place online on Wednesday 17th March 2027. To be among the first to receive programme updates, announcements, and early-bird opportunities, register your interest for 2027.

Missed out this year? You can still watch all the insights, key sessions, and expert discussions with our OnDemand Event. Access full recordings of every session, including presentations from leading industry speakers, and watch at your own pace.

Why Watch OnDemand?

  • Watch on your own schedule – no need to clear your calendar or worry about time zones
  • Learn at your own pace – pause, rewind, and rewatch key moments to fully absorb the content
  • Get instant access after purchase to expert insights and curated content, perfect for busy professionals who want high-value content on demand

Access this conference OnDemand today for £245 here.

Supporters Include

Overview

While the Online Safety Act marked a significant step toward regulation, professionals in schools and children’s services still face challenges in applying and keeping pace with the law. With the ever-evolving digital landscape it is more critical than ever to build robust safeguarding strategies.

  • Over 40% of teens say they’ve seen AI-generated sexual content or deepfakes involving someone they know (Thorn, 2025)

  • 1 in 3 children aged 8–17 have encountered violent or hateful material online in the past year (Ofcom, 2025)

  • 92% of children aged 11–16 use social media daily, but nearly half say it negatively affects their wellbeing (YoungMinds, 2025)

Join us at The Online Safety Conference 2026 where leading voices in policy, education, law enforcement, and child protection will explore the most pressing challenges in keeping children safe online. Through expert-led keynotes, practical case studies, and cross-sector collaboration, this event will offer strategies for tackling image-based abuse, radicalisation, misinformation, harmful algorithms, and AI-driven threats, while equipping professionals with tools to create digitally resilient and empowered young people.

Get in Touch

Agenda

  • Registration

  • Chair’s Opening Remarks

    Boglarka Meggyesfalvi, Researcher, Child Online Harms Policy Think Tank, Institute for Connected Communities, University of East London (CONFIRMED)

    University of East London logo

  • Keynote: The Online Safety Act: From Policy to Practice

    • Understanding the Online Safety Act and implications for schools and safeguarding professionals in its implementation and development
    • Outlining potential pitfalls of the online safety act and how these can be addressed with young people
    • Translating policy into effective daily practice in schools, services and online platforms
    • Guidance on addressing challenges around enforcement and clarity across digital spaces

    Maeve Walsh, OSA Network Director, Online Safety Act Network (CONFIRMED)

  • Tech-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence: The Global Challenge of Non-Consensual Intimate Image Abuse

    • Understanding NCII as Gender-Based Violence: Why this abuse is a critical component of tech-facilitated harms.
    • The Scale and Impact: High-level overview of societal and individual consequences.
    • Roles and Responsibilities: How industry, NGOs, and multi-stakeholder collaboration can address NCII globally.
    • Looking Ahead: Future priorities, emerging risks, and opportunities for collective action.

    David Wright CBE, CEO, SWGfL and Director, UK Safer Internet Centre (CONFIRMED)

  • Keynote: Creating PSHE Curricula for Online Safety and Digital Wellbeing

    • Frameworks for embedding online safety into PSHE at all ages in line with statutory RSHE guidance
    • Guidance on navigating sensitive topics such as pornography, image-based abuse, identity-based hate, and self-image
    • Embedding a whole school approach to online safety

    Jenny Fox, Senior Subject Specialist, PSHE Association (CONFIRMED)

  • Questions & Answers

  • Comfort Break

  • Keynote: The Impact of Technology-Facilitated Violence

    • Outlining the rise of online misogyny and technology-facilitated violence
    • The impact of technology-facilitated violence on young women and girls
    • Law and policy responses to technology-facilitated violence against girls: UK and international
    • Prevention of technology-facilitated violence against girls: looking forward

    Professor Olga Jurasz, Director, Centre for Protecting Women Online & Professor of Law, The Open University (CONFIRMED)

  • Case study: Children and AI

    • Exploring the use of AI by young people
    • Understanding young people’s experience of AI as well as their concerns
    • Reflection on Safer Internet Day 2026, with its focus on the safe and responsible use of AI
    • Practical approaches for professionals to educate young people about AI safety

    Will Gardner, CEO, Childnet (CONFIRMED)

  • Questions & Answers 

  • Lunch Break

  • Breakout Networking: Tackling Emerging Online Harms Through Education and Safeguarding

    This interactive breakout session invites delegates to explore practical approaches to identifying and addressing new forms of online harm, including AI-generated abuse, deepfakes, and digital grooming. Participants will share current challenges and successes in embedding effective online safety education and safeguarding practices across schools, children’s services, and frontline settings.

  • Keynote: Implementing the Online Safety Act

    Jennifer Lazarus, Protection of Children Policy Manager in the Online Safety Group, Ofcom (CONFIRMED)

    Ofcom logo

  • Case Study: Understanding the Impact of Online Harms on Young People 

    Becca Percival, Business Development Manager & Flourishing Families Teacher, Peace and Mind UK (CONFIRMED)

  • Questions & Answers

  • Comfort Break 

  • Keynote: Tackling Misinformation and Extremist Content Online

    • Practical tips for teaching critical thinking and media literacy
    • Understanding legal-but-harmful content and how to address it in schools
    • Tools to educate young people about misinformation and polarisation

    Geoff Wells, RSHE and Citizenship Subject Lead, Oak National Academy (CONFIRMED) 

  • Keynote: Working with Parents: Building Digital Resilience at Home

    • Guidance on supporting families to talk openly about digital risks
    • Practical tools to help parents monitor, guide, and support online activity
    • Strategies for strengthening parent-school partnerships and parental engagement

    Tom Pinfield, Assistant Education Manager, Childnet (CONFIRMED)

  • Questions & Answers

  • Chair’s Closing Remarks

    Boglarka Meggyesfalvi, Researcher, Child Online Harms Policy Think Tank, Institute for Connected Communities, University of East London (CONFIRMED)

    University of East London logo

  • Conference Close 

Speakers

Maeve Walsh

OSA Network Director

Online Safety Act Network

Jenny Fox

Senior Subject Specialist

PSHE Association

Professor Olga Jurasz

Director, Centre for Protecting Women Online & Professor of Law

The Open University

Hannah Oertel

External Relations & Programme Innovation Manager, Brianna’s Legacy & Founder

Delay Smartphones

Testimonials

I really enjoyed the day. The speakers were relevant and interesting, and the online format was easy to understand. Overall, it was a pleasure to attend.

Service Development ManagerDerbyshire County Council

A great conference for an understanding about the challenges of online safety.

Ofcom logo

Enforcement PrincipalOfcom

This training was effective and very informative. The speakers were good and made the training more interesting.

Welfare advisor Central Bedfordshire college

A great set of speakers and excellent Q&A sessions.

 

Safeguarding ConsultantGuide Dogs

Why You Should Attend

Why Attend:

  High-level keynotes on the latest initiatives on protecting children online from policymakers and leading experts
  Case studies showing best practice in strategies that implement school-wide policies on online safety and best safeguard children
  A wide range of topics including radicalisation online, providing support for children with SEND, and co-producing digital safeguarding strategies
  Network with senior colleagues from across the public and voluntary sectors
  Gain 8 hours of CPD points towards your yearly quota

Who Should Attend

 

Advocates Charities
Safeguarding Leads Think Tanks/NGOs
Academics Police and Law Enforcement
Policy Managers Local Councils
Teachers Government Departments
Social Workers  Schools
Police Universities

Pricing Options

PRIVATE SECTOR
£499.00

Your delegate place at this leading conference gives you: Full access to the conference; E-guide; Networking opportunities during the day; Access to presentations post conference; 8 CPD Points.

BOOK NOW
PUBLIC SECTOR
£379.00

Your delegate place at this leading conference gives you: Full access to the conference; E-guide; Networking opportunities during the day; Access to presentations post conference; 8 CPD Points.

BOOK NOW
VOLUNTARY SECTOR
£340.00

Your delegate place at this leading conference gives you: Full access to the conference; E-guide; Networking opportunities during the day; Access to presentations post conference; 8 CPD Points.

BOOK NOW

Sponsorship

Raise Your Profile, Showcase Your Solutions, Generate New Business

If your products, services, and solutions can support our audiences in their roles, and you want to make connections and generate new business with key stakeholders, decision makers, and influencers, then please contact us HERE

IMPORTANT: There are only a small number of sponsorship opportunities available to ensure maximum exposure and ROI – contact us today to secure your place.

Virtual vs F2F

Whilst F2F provide better options for networking, there are many distinct advantages of sponsoring our online conferences including:

  • Wider geographical reach of delegates and a different audience who prefer online to f2f
  • Lower sponsorship package costs
  • No travel/accommodation
  • Less time out of the office
  • No stand materials required (lower costs)
  • 1 of only 2 sponsors involved – less competition on the day
  • Prime speaking slot in the morning of the conference including Q&A – less distractions and easier for delegates to hear/absorb information
  • Receive all delegate data after the conference to follow-up directly with those who attend and don’t attend (small % but still key stakeholders)
  • Ongoing exposure via OnDemand access (coming soon)

To find out more and discuss your specific objectives, please contact us below: