Child Safety
How Mor approaches child safety, prohibited content, and reporting mechanisms.
Report Child Safety Concerns
If you believe a child is in danger or you've encountered content involving child exploitation, report it to Mor's Safety Center.
If a child is in immediate danger, contact local emergency services.
This page provides information about Mor's approach to child safety and reporting and does not modify or replace Mor's Terms of Service or other binding policies.
Purpose and Commitment
Mor maintains zero tolerance for child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and any content that sexualizes, exploits, or endangers children. This commitment applies globally across all Mor services.
For purposes of this policy, a minor is defined as any person under the age of 18.
Mor is not directed to children under the age of 13, and we do not knowingly allow children under 13 to create accounts. Users must meet the minimum age requirements set forth in our Terms of Service.
What We Prohibit
The following categories of content and behavior are strictly prohibited on Mor:
- Child sexual abuse material (CSAM) — Any visual depiction of sexually explicit conduct involving a minor.
- Sexualized depictions of minors — Including AI-generated, illustrated, or digitally manipulated content that sexualizes children, regardless of whether it depicts a real child.
- Grooming and solicitation — Communication intended to build trust with a minor for purposes of sexual exploitation, or attempts to solicit sexual content from minors.
- Facilitation of child exploitation — Sharing, trading, or providing access to exploitative material; coordinating exploitation; or providing instructions for accessing such material.
- Content that endangers minors — Material that promotes, normalizes, or glorifies abuse, or that could reasonably be expected to endanger a child's physical or emotional safety.
This list is not exhaustive. Mor may take action against content or behavior that falls outside these categories if we determine it poses a risk to child safety.
Detection and Limitations
Mor uses a combination of technical measures and human review to detect and address child safety violations. Our approach may include automated content analysis, user reports, and trained trust and safety specialists.
Limitations
No detection system is perfect. We cannot guarantee that all harmful content will be detected proactively or that no violating content will ever appear on the platform.
- Detection methods may evolve as technology and threats change.
- The absence of automated detection does not constitute approval of any content.
- We rely on user reports to help identify content that may not be caught by automated systems.
If you encounter content that may violate this policy, please report it through the Safety Center.
Reporting
If you encounter content involving child exploitation or endangerment, report it through Mor's reporting system. Reports involving child safety are prioritized.
Reporting guidelines
- Do not download, save, or redistribute illegal material. Report using links, descriptions, usernames, or other metadata.
- Provide as much context as possible, including URLs, timestamps, and descriptions of the content or behavior.
- If you have already reported to law enforcement or other authorities, you may include that information in your report.
Emergency situations
Mor is not an emergency service. If you believe a child is in immediate danger, contact local law enforcement or emergency services first. You may also report to the NCMEC CyberTipline (for U.S.-related reports).
Enforcement
Reports involving child safety are prioritized and reviewed as quickly as practicable. Enforcement actions may include:
- Content removal — Violating content is removed upon confirmation.
- Account action — Accounts involved in child safety violations may be suspended or permanently terminated.
- Permanent termination — Confirmed child sexual exploitation results in permanent account termination without the possibility of reinstatement.
The specific enforcement action taken depends on the nature and severity of the violation. We may take action based on a single violation or a pattern of behavior.
Law Enforcement and Legal Cooperation
Mor cooperates with law enforcement and regulatory authorities in accordance with applicable law.
- Information preservation — Mor may preserve account information and content in connection with child safety investigations, as required by law or valid legal process.
- Disclosure — Mor may disclose information to law enforcement when required by law, valid legal process, or in emergency situations involving imminent harm to a child.
- Reporting to authorities — Where applicable, Mor may report apparent CSAM to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) or other appropriate authorities.
Legal processes and reporting requirements may vary by jurisdiction. Mor complies with applicable local law where we operate.
For more information about law enforcement requests, see our Law Enforcement Guidelines.
Appeals and Errors
No reinstatement for confirmed violations
Accounts terminated for confirmed child sexual exploitation or CSAM violations are not eligible for reinstatement. This policy is non-negotiable.
Error review
If you believe your account was actioned in error (for example, due to a false positive in automated detection), you may submit an appeal through our appeals process. We review appeals on a case-by-case basis.
Error review does not weaken our zero-tolerance policy. Appeals are evaluated to correct genuine mistakes, not to reconsider confirmed violations.
Contact the Safety Center
For questions about Mor's child safety protections, reporting processes, enforcement practices, or how child safety policies are applied, contact the Safety Center.
If you are unable to use this form, you may email safety@themorapp.com.