Google has agreed to introduce measures backed by Prime Minister David Cameron to block child sex abuse content across its search engines.
The groundbreaking move will soon prevent illegal images and videos from appearing in more than 100,000 search terms associated with child sex abuse.
Google says it has also developed technology that will allow illegal videos to be 'tagged' so that all duplicate copies can be removed across the internet.
The changes will apply across the world in more than 150 languages.
Microsoft, which operates search engines Bing and powers Yahoo, will reportedly confirm at a Downing Street summit on online pornography today that it is introducing similar reforms.
Google chairman Eric Schmidt, writing in the Daily Mail ahead of the No 10 talks, says: "We've listened."
He added: "We've fine-tuned Google Search to prevent links to child sexual abuse material from appearing in our results."
Mr Cameron has welcomed the move as "a really significant step forward", but he threatened to bring forward new legislation if search engine companies failed to deliver on their promises.
Mr Cameron told the Daily Mail: "We learnt from cases like the murder of Tia Sharp and April Jones that people will often start accessing extreme material via a simple search in one of the mainstream search engines."
Senior figures from Google, Microsoft and BT were summoned to Parliament for a meeting with Culture Secretary Maria Miller in June where they told they must do more to crackdown on child porn.
The announcement comes Mr Cameron is set to reveal at today's summit that Britain's National Crime Agency is to join America's FBI to tackle online child abuse.
The UK's National Crime Agency is to join forces with America's FBIThe transatlantic taskforce is being established by the US assistant attorney general and the British to target criminals who use the internet to hide from the law, Downing Street says.
It will be specifically tasked with tracking down offenders who use the "dark web" - secret and encrypted networks that are increasingly being exploited by paedophiles and other criminals.
The NCA estimates that the number of UK daily users of secret or encrypted networks will have risen to 20,000 by the end of the year.
While some will be using them for legitimate purposes, UK law enforcement and intelligence agencies believe that paedophiles involved in distributing child abuse material are using them to hide their identities.
At the same time a group of industry experts is being set up to look at new technical solutions for removing child abuse material from the the internet.
Joanna Shields, the chief executive of Tech City UK, said it would be looking to spot the "threats of future" to protect the most vulnerable in society.
"It's vital that governments and industry work together to eradicate child abuse content from the internet, and that we mobilise the best and brightest in the technology industry to come up with innovative solutions to tackling this problem," she said.
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