RT if you like!
Urgent! Sign My Petition To Urge Congress To Pass The Protect Act, To Protect Children, Women & Men From Being Exploited Online! Sign It Now Or Be A Part Of The Problem!
https://t.co/nuTjHPTA4k
📢 Please help us get HB 2133, the PROTECT Act, signed into law!
Email: [email protected]
Email script:
Dear Governor Hobbs,
As a concerned citizen, I strongly urge you to sign HB 2133, the Protect Act. This common-sense bill requires commercial websites publishing sexual material to verify explicit informed consent and confirm every depicted person was at least 18 before content is published.
HB 2133:
• Helps prevent CSAM and child exploitation through age verification.
• Strengthens protections against revenge porn and NCII through explicit consent verification.
• Protects adult content creators by preventing stolen content from being uploaded without permission, protecting their identity, ownership, and income.
• Holds commercial platforms accountable when they fail to verify age and consent.
The Free Speech Coalition has taken a neutral position on the bill, and the sponsor collaborated with companies like Meta to balance strong protections with free speech.
As a champion of women’s rights and child welfare, I respectfully ask you to sign HB 2133.
Thank you for your leadership.
Sincerely,
Call: (602) 542-4331
Call script:
Hi, I’m calling to express my support for the PROTECT Act. I strongly encourage Governor Hobbs to sign HB 2133 to protect individuals from online exploitation and non-consensual content. Thank you.
📢 Please help us get HB 2133, the PROTECT Act, signed into law!
Email: [email protected]
Email script:
Dear Governor Hobbs,
As a concerned citizen, I strongly urge you to sign HB 2133, the Protect Act. This common-sense bill requires commercial websites publishing sexual material to verify explicit informed consent and confirm every depicted person was at least 18 before content is published.
HB 2133:
• Helps prevent CSAM and child exploitation through age verification.
• Strengthens protections against revenge porn and NCII through explicit consent verification.
• Protects adult content creators by preventing stolen content from being uploaded without permission, protecting their identity, ownership, and income.
• Holds commercial platforms accountable when they fail to verify age and consent.
The Free Speech Coalition has taken a neutral position on the bill, and the sponsor collaborated with companies like Meta to balance strong protections with free speech.
As a champion of women’s rights and child welfare, I respectfully ask you to sign HB 2133.
Thank you for your leadership.
Sincerely,
Call: (602) 542-4331
Call script:
Hi, I’m calling to express my support for the PROTECT Act. I strongly encourage Governor Hobbs to sign HB 2133 to protect individuals from online exploitation and non-consensual content. Thank you.
I'm officially on Cameo! Get your personalized message from me, send me a message there and I'll send you a message right back! Talk soon!
https://t.co/PuOw9EemJI
Last night we sent my bipartisan bill HB2133 to @GovernorHobbs for her signature.
This bill prevents child p*rn & revenge p*rn from being uploaded to the internet. I very strongly request that Gov Hobbs sign this bill & demonstrate that she cares about protecting children.
@Support I’ve been trying to resolve a subscription payout discrepancy for over a month. I’ve followed every instruction from support, but my account still has an unexplained accounting discrepancy. Could someone from the Creator Monetization/Payments team please review my case?
@premium I’ve been trying to resolve a subscription payout discrepancy for over a month. I’ve followed every instruction from support, but my account still has an unexplained accounting discrepancy. Could someone from the Creator Monetization/Payments team please review my case?
I'm officially on Cameo! Get your personalized message from me, send me a message there and I'll send you a message right back! Talk soon!
https://t.co/PuOw9EemJI
The Protect act also the same framework as amendment 300 would block non consensual content before ever being uploaded, as a survivor who’s being fighting to get the protect act across the finish line in every state and country for the last 4-5 years, I know how badly this is needed!
Thank you Postgaze for highlighting me and my work with Foundation Ra with The Queen @ErinBrockovich
Erin Brockovich Launches National AI Data Center Map as Thousands of Communities Raise Concerns About AI Infrastructure https://t.co/MzjA2ZGrJR
Thank you Postgaze for highlighting me and my work with Foundation Ra with The Queen @ErinBrockovich
Erin Brockovich Launches National AI Data Center Map as Thousands of Communities Raise Concerns About AI Infrastructure https://t.co/MzjA2ZGrJR
@Cultination1 Men abandon their children everyday and none of them make any headlines, over 80% of households in the US are single mother households, it’s been so normalized by men.
Many people believe issues surrounding non-consensual content, AI-generated exploitation, and CSAM have already been solved because new laws are beginning to emerge around these topics.
But it’s important to understand the difference between reactive laws and prevention-focused laws.
For example, laws like the Take It Down Act primarily focus on takedown processes after harmful content has already been uploaded and distributed online.
Other proposed approaches, such as the Defiance Act, focus heavily on lawsuits and legal action after the abuse has already occurred — still placing much of the burden on survivors to identify perpetrators, pursue legal action, and deal with the emotional and financial aftermath after the damage is already done.
But by the time victims are forced to chase takedowns, lawsuits, or copies of exploitative material across the internet, the harm has often already spread to countless websites, accounts, and platforms.
The real question is:
Why are we still allowing exploitative, non-consensual, and abusive content to be uploaded in the first place?
The PROTECT Act focuses on prevention before harm occurs through age and consent verification for uploaders to adult platforms.
Because survivors should not carry the burden of cleaning up abuse that should never have been uploadable to begin with.
Many people believe issues surrounding non-consensual content, AI-generated exploitation, and CSAM have already been solved because new laws are beginning to emerge around these topics.
But it’s important to understand the difference between reactive laws and prevention-focused laws.
For example, laws like the Take It Down Act primarily focus on takedown processes after harmful content has already been uploaded and distributed online.
Other proposed approaches, such as the Defiance Act, focus heavily on lawsuits and legal action after the abuse has already occurred — still placing much of the burden on survivors to identify perpetrators, pursue legal action, and deal with the emotional and financial aftermath after the damage is already done.
But by the time victims are forced to chase takedowns, lawsuits, or copies of exploitative material across the internet, the harm has often already spread to countless websites, accounts, and platforms.
The real question is:
Why are we still allowing exploitative, non-consensual, and abusive content to be uploaded in the first place?
The PROTECT Act focuses on prevention before harm occurs through age and consent verification for uploaders to adult platforms.
Because survivors should not carry the burden of cleaning up abuse that should never have been uploadable to begin with.