Ylva kind of tells on herself(1) when she says she's been primarily talking to the "think of the children" people and "Big Tech" (conflating Big Tech with anyone worth talking to).
Then, she effectively kicked civil society to the curb (who report great difficulty in trying to contact her(2)).
In an unsurprising twist, it turns out she was involved in "WeProtect". A little echo chamber (launched by the British Government(3)), it has "think of the children" interests, Google / Facebook appear to be involved (or were)(4), and government interests.
As has always been the issue, she ignores the fundamental rights of everyone, whether that is the freedom of expression, privacy, or due process, and instead echoes the rhetoric of a particular group of people (who either ignore fundamental rights concerns outright, minimize them, a few even rationalizing some rights violations as a "good thing").
We also get clearly nonsense claims from them like one in four children have been raped / molested which feels like something there just to muddy the waters. In fact, any misleading claim can be advanced, if it is dramatic enough to stir up an emotional reaction. No need to think of whether it is even plausible (or debunked, as is often the case). Toss it like a grenade and run.
3 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joanna_Shields%2C_Baroness_Shields
4 https://www.weprotect.org/wp-content/uploads/WePROTECT-Advisory-Board-Terms-of-Reference.pdf
https://www.weprotect.org/wp-content/uploads/WePROTECT-Advisory-Board-Terms-of-Reference.pdf
"by advising the steering committee of the new Global Fund to End Violence Against Children and helping to secure funding for the Fund’s work"
This refers to one of the roles of the Board.
Interesting... It never occurred to me they might be getting funded by these people.
Examining it further, while "WeProtect" appears to have a "company or two", currently featuring Snapchat, this doesn't seem like much more than a token company to make the org appear more diverse than it actually is. The "foundation" is overwhelmingly in the hands of governmental / law enforcement interests, as is it's direction.
Also, these companies aren't exactly ones known for being protective of fundamental rights, such as the freedom of expression and privacy. Snapchat has never used E2EE, and hasn't been known for making difficult policy decisions, or opposing rights violations. If anything, it seems they're more preoccupied with trying to wipe their reputation away of being a "platform used primarily for sexting".
Google / Facebook, if they're still there, might balk at breaking E2EE. However, it's not clear this might have been discussed with them here, and this is not the only way someone's rights might be violated. They also don't have a unique interest in effectively advocating for someone's rights. Even if they did, their presence seems mainly advisory.
Though, if you dig down, even these "think of the children" people usually have strong ties to government.
I'm not going into that now though. #chatcontrol