Children are manipulated as young as 11 to perform despicable tasks through a shadow -like online network called 'The Com'.
The police have marked concern about the network, where access and subsequent progression are determined because children are willing to perform despicable actions.
Young British boys are often encouraged to commit sexual violence against girls and to upload to the COM, which works on encrypted sites such as Telegram and Discord.
It consists of many subgroups, including the Maniacs Murder Cult, the No Lives Matter Cult, Brothernhood of Blood and the Cult of White Misantrope.
They are usually aimed at boys from 11 to 17 years old.
The National Crime Agency (NCA) has raised the issue with ministers and Minister of the Interior Yvette Cooper is supposed to worry.
Young users get access after they are forced to perform sick 'initiation', such as criminal damage within their communities, or violence against younger brothers and sisters, classmates, pets, stray animals or themselves.
The groups then attribute the status based on the willingness of participants to take on shocking and harmful behavior.

The police have marked concern about the network, where access and subsequent progression are determined because children are willing to perform despicable actions

The National Crime Agency (NCA) has raised the issue with ministers, and Minister of the Interior Yvette Cooper is supposed to worry

It consists of many subgroups, including the Maniacs Murder Cult, the No Lives Matter Cult, Brothernhood of Blood and the cult of white Misantrope that was usually aimed at boys from 11 to 17 years old (Stock Image)
A source said: “For alphas in the network, newcomers are just feeding to be persuaded to commit violence of violence, to generate more unique content for the group – some of which can be sold to other networks – and ultimately have to be cooled for money.”
The Netflix shows adolescence – about a boy who has been arrested for killing a classmate – is useful in increasing the consciousness of how bad online networks can be, the source said.
Protection of Minister Jess Phillips said to The Mail on Sunday: 'Many parents will have viewed adolescence and ask: how real is this?
“What the experts in the home office warned me was that the COM is one of the biggest threats that young boys are confronted in our country: a loose ties with online networks that are active in the coded shadows of social media and instant Messaging platforms.”
The NCA cooperates with law enforcement agencies around the world, also in the United States, the Philippines and New Zealand, to prevent material from being shared and to tackle the perpetrators. The government also insists on social media companies to clamp the groups.
Former deputy mayor of London and champion of women's rights Baroness Jones said: 'This is a very painful report of practices that harm the boys themselves, as well as the animals or people who are the target.
“It is precisely the type of online material to prohibit immediately and prosecuted the organizers, for the possible later crimes of blackmail and extortion, but also for the crime of harmful young spirits.”
Campaigner Joeli Brearley, who has the podcast co-gastheer to become a boy, said: 'It is really frightening. As a parent, it makes you sick for the stomach, and I feel a constant fear of where this is going.

The Netflix shows adolescence – about a boy who has been arrested for killing a classmate – is useful in increasing the awareness of how bad online networks can be, the source said

Protection of Minister Jess Phillips said to The Mail on Sunday: “Many parents will have viewed adolescence and ask: how real is this?”
“Ninety-nine percent of the parents are completely unprepared and naive-they have no idea what their children do online.”
She urged parents to be vigilant and to have their children look at the activities if they have access to the internet.
'You cannot prevent children from seeing things online, but it is important to have those conversations with them about what they see, they give them the feeling that they can come to you. And never judge them if they do – or they will stop talking to you. '
She added that more needs to be done to prevent boys from feeling 'lost': 'Boys do not feel defended. These sites give them a sense of community, they mislead them by thinking that this is what it means to be a man. We must be better in filling their emptiness. '