Foundation Ra is a survivor led, 501(c)3 nonprofit organization that supports children, women, and men that are victims of online image-based sexual abuse.
I fully support Amendment 300 in the UK’s Crime and Policing Bill.
It follows the same exact framework as the PROTECT Act—requiring real age and consent verification for uploaders to adult sites.
As a survivor, I know exactly why this is needed and why takedowns don’t work.
After working on this for over four years with the UK’s Cyber Helpline and helping create the Global Online Harms Alliance, I’m glad to see this moving forward.
Watch this to understand why.
P*rnhub was previously exposed for monetizing real videos of abuse, including content involving drugged and unconscious victims. Only after massive public pressure and legal action did Visa and Mastercard cut ties—forcing the removal of over 90% of the site.
Now, platforms like Motherless continue to profit from similar illegal and exploitative content, still processing payments through major financial systems.
This is exactly why stronger, preventative laws are needed—not just reactive takedowns after the damage is done.
This is the reason the PROTECT Act is needed globally.
The PROTECT Act requires mandatory age verification and verified consent at the point of upload for adult platforms—stopping illegal content before it ever goes live, not after it spreads.
As someone who has been exploited on P*rnhub and Motherless and been fighting for over four years to make this a requirement—this will ensure that uploaders to adult sites are verified and that consent is proven before any content is allowed online.
The internet has no borders. Protection shouldn’t either.
@hartwig_free@BasedBlondex@Uldouz Yes just go to https://t.co/3M4jbkEmSb resources and go to take down per email and email our take down crew and we’ll help you getting it taken down. ❤️
CW: Image-based abuse, exploitation, sexual abuse
Survivors of image-based abuse deserve more than just apologies and after-the-fact remedies—they deserve protection.
In 2014, actress and influencer @Uldouz Wallace learned that intimate images — secretly taken and sent to her by an ex-boyfriend — had been hacked from her iCloud and distributed on adult websites without her consent. Now, she's fighting to prevent that from happening to others by working to pass the Protect Act, a law that would require adult websites to verify the age and consent of everyone depicted in uploaded content. Thanks to Uldouz and Assemblymember Diane Dixon (@DianeDixonAD72), the Protect Act just passed through Cailfornia’s Assembly Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee with unanimous support.
To join Uldouz in her fight for justice, sign her petition to help pass the Protect Act at https://t.co/hzp1eFnOWC.
@Foundationra1
#ProtectAct #EndImageBasedAbuse #Deepfake #AI #VictimsRights
I testified at the California State Capitol—and the bill I created, the PROTECT Act, was passed unanimously.
This isn’t just another reactive law. It’s a real solution that stops image based abuse before it’s uploaded.
Watch the full testimony and share it. Let’s finish what we started.
#PROTECTAct
After years of being silenced, I’m proud to share that I created and introduced the PROTECT Act: the only bill that stops image-based abuse before it happens. It’s already in Congress and multiple states. We don’t need more awareness—we need action.
In 2014, Uldouz Wallace was subjected to image-based abuse when intimate photos — secretly taken by an ex-boyfriend without her consent — were leaked and distributed on adult sites against her will after she was hacked. The violation cost her work opportunities, strained relationships with friends and family, and damaged her reputation. Determined to fight back, she has since dedicated herself to passing the Protect Act, a law designed to block non consensual content from being uploaded to adult sites through consent verification. She also founded Foundation Ra, a non-profit that provides legal advice, free take down services, and mental health support to victims of image-based abuse.
To join Uldouz in her fight for justice, sign her petition to help pass the Protect Act at https://t.co/hzp1eFnOWC.
@uldouz@Foundationra1
#ProtectAct #EndImageBasedAbuse #Deepfake #AI #VictimsRights #ImageBasedAbused #Survivor
Elon, with AI advancing and deepfake tech becoming more dangerous, why aren’t we preventing non-consensual content from being uploaded in the first place? The PROTECT Act focuses on verifying age and consent for uploaders only on adult sites—stopping exploitation at the source. Would love your thoughts!
He was only 15 when it happened. A stranger online tricked him into sending a photo. Within hours, the threats began.
“Send more, or I’ll share this with your family. Your school. The whole world.” He panicked. He did what they said.
But it was never enough. The threats got worse. They uploaded his images to adult sites. He begged for help, but the damage was done.
His face. His name. Tied forever to content he never consented to. He felt like his life was over and unfortunately he’s no longer with us today…
This could’ve been prevented and many lives could have been saved. The PROTECT Act would require sites to verify age and consent before uploading—stopping sextortion at the source.
No more endless takedown battles. No more victims carrying this burden alone. The PROTECT Act is the only real solution.
We must act NOW. Every day we wait, another child becomes a victim and more lives are lost. Hold these sites accountable before more lives are destroyed. #PROTECTAct
Isn’t it weird that the nonprofit that harassed, gang stalked, intimidated, bullied & tried to silence me wanted me to drop the PROTECT Act—yet now they’re pushing the Take It Down Act? Why are they pushing a bill that only “helps” after the damage is done, what’s in it for them?
Also Isn’t it strange how the same nonprofit strategically placed a so-called ‘survivor’—who is backed by their unlimited PR, funding, and media coverage—at the hearing? She works for a nonprofit that does NOTHING for survivors, pushes a fake app that doesn’t actually remove content, and is standing behind a bill that was never meant to create real change. It’s just a placement bill to make it look like something is being done while protecting the same systems that allow the harm to continue.”
I had several people assuming I’m behind the Take It Down Act when my focus has always been the PROTECT Act. So I want to set the record straight. Maybe it’s because they know who’s really been leading this fight all along. Also know that I don’t support weak bills.
Isn’t it strange that the same non profit that gang-stalked, harassed, intimidated, bullied and trying to silence me for the Protect Act put me in the same room as this trafficker painting her as a victim of image abuse? Why is the leader of this group in the court room supporting a trafficker?
https://t.co/cyBacIwfTy
https://t.co/7wdbTuZbJ4