Prince William’s United for Wildlife initiative has received strong support from major tech companies. Google, Meta, TikTok, and Alibaba have joined hands to help stop the illegal wildlife trade.
These companies plan to use artificial intelligence and better monitoring tools to remove illegal listings from their platforms. This move marks a significant step in the global fight against wildlife crime.
Big Tech Companies Take Action

The announcement came during a special business forum organized by United for Wildlife in London. Several leading companies made strong promises.
Google, Meta, TikTok, and Alibaba will use AI to detect and remove illegal wildlife listings
PayPal, Chainalysis, TRM Labs, and Luno will help track and block illegal payments
Vodafone, Vodacom, and Safaricom will improve monitoring on the M-Pesa mobile money platform
British Airways and Heathrow Airport will run awareness campaigns for travelers
These efforts aim to disrupt both the online sale and financial side of the illegal wildlife trade.
Why This Campaign Matters
The illegal wildlife trade is worth up to $20 billion every year. It fuels corruption, violence, and organized crime while pushing many endangered species closer to extinction.
United for Wildlife, started by Prince William in 2013, has already built a network of over 400 partners and helped hundreds of investigations.
With this new coalition, technology companies are bringing powerful tools to the fight. AI can now scan millions of listings quickly to find suspicious posts selling ivory, pangolin scales, or other illegal products.
Financial companies will focus on following the money trail behind these crimes.
Comparison Table: Old Approach vs New Coalition
Aspect | Previous Efforts | New Tech Coalition |
Detection Method | Manual reporting | AI-powered scanning |
Companies Involved | Mostly NGOs | Google, Meta, PayPal & more |
Focus Areas | Awareness campaigns | Online listings + payments |
Scale | Limited | Millions of listings monitored |
This partnership shows how big tech is stepping up to solve real-world problems. By combining AI with financial tracking, the coalition hopes to make it much harder for criminals to sell illegal wildlife products online.
Prince William’s United for Wildlife continues to grow stronger with these new powerful allies.
The illegal wildlife trade has been a hidden crisis for too long. With Google, Meta, and other companies now actively involved, there is real hope for faster progress in protecting endangered animals.
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