It’s Time to Curtail the Censorship Industry Cartel – CircleID
Last month INHOPE, a global trade association of child abuse reporting hotlines, rejected a joint call from Prostasia Foundation, the National Coalition Against Censorship, Article 19, and the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, that its members should stop treating cartoons as if they were images of child sexual abuse. As our joint letter pointed out, INHOPE's conflation of offensive artwork with actual abuse images has resulted in the misdirection of police resources against artists and fans predominantly LGBTQ+ people and women rather than towards the apprehension of those who abuse real children.
INHOPE is not a child protection organization, but an industry association for organizations and agencies that provide censorship services to government and private industry. Its Articles of Association are surprisingly explicit about this: its objective is to "facilitate and promote the work of INHOPE Member Hotlines, whose work is to eradicate illegal content, primarily child sexual abuse material, on the internet" [emphasis added].
It executes this mission by collecting personal information of those who share images that are reported to it (which can include a name, email address, phone number, and IP address), and sharing this information among its member hotlines and with police. Again, it is explicit about this, acknowledging that its "core business revolves around the exchange of sensitive data." INHOPE members have actively lobbied to weaken European privacy rules so that they can maintain these data collection practices, while refusing to accept a compromise allowing continued scanning for actual child abuse images.
Such data collection is clearly justifiable when it is limited to actual sexual abuse images. But INHOPE's data collection isn't limited to this. It siphons up reports of all manner of reports that its members declare to be illegal in their country, and (with one exception mentioned below) gives them another "once-over" to determine whether they are illegal worldwide, only in the reporting or hosting country, or not at all, before forwarding them to INTERPOL. Even if this assessment leads to a determination that the images are lawful, INHOPE doesn't delete them. Inexplicably, it instead classifies them as "Other Child-Related Content," retains them in a database, and sends them to law enforcement for what it describes as "documentation purposes."
Images reported by NCMEC, the American hotline, undergo even less vetting. Despite being an INHOPE member, NCMEC doesn't utilize the services of INHOPE analysts, but directly shares reported images and associated personal information with law enforcement agencies around the world. According to Swiss authorities, up to 90% of these images are later found to be lawful.
INHOPE chose to mischaracterize our call as being grounded in a misunderstanding of the fact that some countries do prohibit artistic sexual representations of minors by law. But our letter explicitly acknowledged that fact, by calling on INHOPE to establish a policy for its members that "artistic images should not be added to image hash lists that INHOPE members maintain, and should not be reported to authorities, unless required by the law where the hotline operates [emphasis added].
There are indeed some countries in which lawmakers do ill-advisedly use the same laws to criminalize the dissemination of offensive art as they use to prohibit the image-based abuse of real children. But the risks of an international organization allowing national authorities to act as gatekeepers of the images that it it treats as child abuse and reports to INTERPOL should be obvious.
For example, Canada's overbroad child pornography laws have recently drawn public attention over the much-criticised prosecution of an author and publisher for a novel that includes a brief scene of child sexual abuse in its retelling of the story of Hansel and Gretel. The Canadian Center for Child Protection, one of only two INHOPE members that proactively searches for illegal material, was responsible for the arrest of a a 17 girl for posting artwork to her blog, when it reported her to authorities in Costa Rica where such artwork is also illegal.
In other countries where cartoon images are illegal, criminal laws are used to disproportionately target and criminalize LGBTQ+ people and women. An example given in our letter was the case of a Russian trans woman who was arrested over cartoon images and sentenced to imprisonment in a men's prison.
Russia's INHOPE member the Friendly Runet Foundation encourages people to report if they are "exasperated by the on-line materials transgressing morality," and boasts that it was "created at the direct participation and works in close partnership with the Department "K" of the Russian ministry of Interior." This terminology, and the hotline's association with the ministry that criminalized "gay propaganda," is understood by Russian citizens as an attack on LGBTQ+ people's speech. It is noted that no LGBTQ+ representatives are included on INHOPE's Advisory Board.
INHOPE can't do anything, directly, about unjust national laws that conflate artistic images with child abuse. INHOPE and its members also can't do much to prevent conservative members of the public from reporting non-actionable content (although one member has taken steps to address this problem). That's why we are directly targeting the public with our "Don't report it, block it information campaign, to stem such false reports at the source.
But what INHOPE can do is to decide what to do with reports that it receives about artistic content. Passing them to law enforcement authorities, using a censorship and surveillance infrastructure that was established to deal with real images of child sexual abuse, isn't its only option here. Neither is it necessary to place those who share such images in the crosshairs of police, especially in countries that have unjust laws or repressive governments.
In 2019, we held a seminar with Internet companies and experts to discuss more proportionate ways of dealing with content such as child nudity, child modeling, and artistic images, that doesn't rise to the legal of child abuse, but which can still be triggering or offensive, or harmful when shared in the wrong context. Through a multi-stakeholder process, this resulted in the development of a set of principles for sexual content moderation and child protection that were launched at last year's Internet Governance Forum.
INHOPE already has a Code of Practice that its members are required to comply with. To be clear, some INHOPE members already do have good practices, and Britain's Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) is one of these: although cartoon images are unlawful in the United Kingdom and the IWF is mandated to accept reports about them, it doesn't include these reports in its hash lists of abuse images, nor share them with foreign police. Our joint letter invited INHOPE to take the opportunity to amend its Code of Practice to apply similar standards to its other members. Its decision not to consider this doesn't reflect well on the organization.
Internet reporting hotlines are selling a product to law enforcement authorities: a censorship service for which actual images of child abuse are only the selling point. This can be a lucrative gig; NCMEC alone received $33 million from the United States government in 2018. Therefore, as a business proposition, it makes sense for INHOPE and its members to ask few questions about the scope of the censorship services their governments call upon them to provide. Conversely, since almost no federal money is being allocated towards abuse prevention, there is little incentive for them to invest in prevention interventions that could reduce abuse in the long run.
But these perverse incentives are leading it down a dangerous path. It's time for us to call this censorship cartel to account, and to demand that it consider the human rights of the innocent people who are being hurt by its approach. The plain fact is that INHOPE doesn't represent the voices of experts who work on child sexual abuse prevention, it represents the law enforcement sector. By refusing to curtail its activities to place the censorship of artistic images outside its remit, INHOPE has lost the moral authority that provides the only justification for its sweeping and dangerous powers.
Go here to see the original:
It's Time to Curtail the Censorship Industry Cartel - CircleID
- Russia restricts use of foreign SIM cards, blocking censorship circumvention and Ukrainian drone navigation - - July 13th, 2026 [July 13th, 2026]
- Censorship of medical journals infects journalism too - Freedom of the Press Foundation - July 13th, 2026 [July 13th, 2026]
- 'Valve isn't interested in a nuanced conversation' says indie dev suffering from Steam censorship - PC Gamer - July 13th, 2026 [July 13th, 2026]
- The Art of War: How artists and writers battle with censorship in times of conflict - Index on Censorship - July 13th, 2026 [July 13th, 2026]
- Mary Morello, Anti-Censorship Activist and Mother of Tom Morello, Dies at 102 - That Eric Alper - July 13th, 2026 [July 13th, 2026]
- Readers sound off on censoring Stars and Stripes, specialized schools and bus commuters - New York Daily News - July 13th, 2026 [July 13th, 2026]
- Video. Fact check: Is the EU planning to censor access to the internet? - Euronews.com - July 13th, 2026 [July 13th, 2026]
- Cultural Solidarity: "Regulating Harmful Music for Youth Is Prior Censorship"... Urges Withdrawal of Kim Hyun's Bill - - July 13th, 2026 [July 13th, 2026]
- Hackers leaked Ksenia Sobchak's correspondence about censorship and moving at the beginning of the wa - - July 13th, 2026 [July 13th, 2026]
- Yippie Ki Yay, Mr. Falcon: The 1990 Die Hard 2 TV edit is still the funniest thing from a bygone era of cen... - JoBlo - July 13th, 2026 [July 13th, 2026]
- Why India Has Spent Years Blocking the Release of Diljit Dosanjhs Satluj - The New York Times - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Faculty sue over Texas' restrictions on teaching race, gender - USA Today - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- NJ court doubles down on one of the worst censorship orders weve seen - Freedom of the Press Foundation - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- DAN GAINOR: We got Twitter/X as a platform 20 years ago and global censors still hate and fear it - Fox News - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Utah book banning spree part of a broader, preemptive campaign of censorship and oppression - World Socialist Web Site - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Letters to the Editor: Our federal museums are no place for censorship and revisionist history - Los Angeles Times - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- A Bombshell Lawsuit Points to an Extraordinary System of Censorship at Texas Tech - The Chronicle of Higher Education - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Cancelled by your future self? The fear isnt censorship. Its permanence - The Indian Express - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- The Myth and the Heretic: How Vit Nams Censorship and Recent Book Ban Suffocate Supporters - The Vietnamese Magazine - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Ken Newman Tackles Self-Censorship and Creative Freedom on Who Are the Bad Guys - V13 Media - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Texas Tech sued for erasing LGBTQ+ people and Black history from university classrooms - Advocate.com - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Media censorship/ How it works and the most common forms - cna.al - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- NCLA to Fifth Circuit: Revive Suit Against Govt-Led Censorship of Covid Vaccine-Injured Americans - The Manila Times - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- "Just too gay" - Robert Yang is battling censorship to launch a collection of his award-winning games on Steam and Itch, and it's completely... - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- The Odyssey Cleared With 0 Cuts By Censor Board, Receives 'A' Certificate - NDTV - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- Satluj row: Is banning the film only making more people watch it? - The Federal - July 11th, 2026 [July 11th, 2026]
- The battle to save Burton and Taylors dirty movie from the censors - The Telegraph - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Meta bosses grilled over decision to cut censorship that has potentially unleashed more antisemitic content - The Guardian - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- 127 Cuts To An 'Uncut' OTT Version: How Satluj Released On ZEE5 Without Censorship - NDTV - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- On the exact day marking the birth of Indian cinema, a raging battle over film censorship takes center stage. Diljit Dosanjhs latest historical drama... - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Arshad Warsi is self-censoring jokes after being trolled by Prabhas fans over joker comment: We need to lighten up | Bollywood - Hindustan Times - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Kansas City counselors win reversal in 8th Circuit Court censorship case - The Pathway - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Censorship, Secrecy, and Speculation Continue After Pilot in Beijing CITIC Tower Collision Identified - China Digital Times - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Bandit Queen to Black Friday: Films that faced bans and censorship in India before Satluj - WION - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Invisible censors - The Times of India - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Ahead of revised online content law, conspiracy theories run wild - Korea JoongAng Daily - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Sony Officially Responds to Censored 'Spider-Man: Brand New Day' Scene Concerns Ahead of Theatrical Debut: 'The Film Has Not Yet Been Submitted to the... - July 7th, 2026 [July 7th, 2026]
- Defamation suit over Google review dismissed; Omaha man says case was a form of censorship - WOWT - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- Silencing mothers and covering up baby deaths is censorship - Index on Censorship - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- U.S. Interior Department Censorship Intensifies As National Park Staff Banned From Reporting Deaths - TheTravel - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- Post-War Internet in Iran: More Censorship and Greater Risks for Users - The Media Line - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- Everything that is valuable in journalism, AI cant do - delano.lu - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- Restored Rembrandt classic shows naked child, religious tolerance image painted over by censors - Washington Times - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- Innu Nation moved to anger, to strength after accusing province of censoring history - Indiginews - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- This is my life: an Afghan womans plea to other 21yearolds - Index on Censorship - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- Thousands of Venezuelans Seek Missing Loved Ones as Internet Censorship Complicates Earthquake Response - Latin Times - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- Censorship of the female body (again)! When patriarchy edits Indian art and history - ThePrint - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- Media Censorship and the Truth: How to Expose Systemic Crimes Against Children - The Good Men Project - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- How two men refused to bend to press censorship during the Emergency - Scroll.in - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- Comedian Mark Normand admits he just made up a story about Netflix trying to censor him - A.V. Club - June 26th, 2026 [June 26th, 2026]
- Artists need to be able to advocate for their own work: new guide advises artists on navigating censorship - The Art Newspaper - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Common Ground on Censorship: Two Bills to Check Government Coercion of Speech - R Street Institute - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- ABC Asks Audience To Help Defend It From Brendan Carrs Dumb Censorship Attacks - Techdirt. - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Freedom School for Educators: Black History Classes in the Age of Censorship - PR Newswire - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Opposition Parties Denounce Revised Law as Unconstitutional Online Gag Rule - - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- The Librarians: A compelling clarion call against ideology-based censorship - The Post - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- UK book banning on the rise - The Boar - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Bruce Campbells 40-year feud with draconian and myopic British censors: Thanks for nothing - Far Out Magazine - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- Infringing the dignity of artists to guard the mood of the PresidentPeople who won against song censorship under the Yoon Suk Yeol administration - - June 24th, 2026 [June 24th, 2026]
- The Government has grown too comfortable with censorship - The Telegraph - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Killing the joke the assassination of a Russian cartoonist - Index on Censorship - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- The key to understanding the success of Polish science-fiction and video games is that they emerged as a means of circumventing Soviet censorship,... - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- 60 years ago: the Czechoslovak film revolution, between the Oscars and censorship - Il Sole 24 ORE - June 22nd, 2026 [June 22nd, 2026]
- Is Britains Social Media Ban a Trojan Horse for Censorship? - First Things - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- 'Unmasking, Naming, and Shaming': This Academic Freedom Group Is Pushing for Campus Censorship - Yahoo - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Dispatch tackles Nintendo's Switch censorship requirements with a brilliantly named HR Violations update and an oozing jam donut where the dong should... - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- 15 articles a day: The extent of the Israeli armys media interference - +972 Magazine - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Say goodbye to Dispatch's hard censorship on Switch and hello to jorts thanks to new update - Polygon.com - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- The Filthy 15 and the PMRC: Revisiting Censorship in the 80s - 94.7 WCSX - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Opinion | Behold, the separation of powers might actually be working - The Washington Post - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Paramount+ blocks FPF ad about Trump-Ellison censorship threat - Freedom of the Press Foundation - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- The Extravaganza Will Not Be Televised - National Review - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Dispatch just got a Nintendo Switch 2 and Switch update to reduce censorship - Nintendo Everything - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Dispatch Has Found The Funniest Possible Way To Fix Its Switch Censorship - GameSpot - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Get To Know The World of Femgore, a Feminist Horror Subgenre - Book Riot - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Ronan Farrow on What We Can Do to Keep Censorship and the Threats of AI at Bay - IndieWire - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- ALERT: AI Censorship Is Already Here. Anthropic AI Model Refuses Service to Climate Deniers. - heartland.org - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Not an isolated act: Artist examines censorship, discrimination through art advocacy - Village Report - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Dispatch Adds New Ways To Censor Things In The Game - IGN - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Jagan Reddy Alleges Censorship as YSRCP Facebook Page Restriction Sparks Political Row in Andhra Pradesh - Daily Pioneer - June 16th, 2026 [June 16th, 2026]