How we can help you

How to ask for help

If you need help, don’t hesitate to contact us and we will support you for free.

Just send us an email: [email protected].
Alternatively, you can submit your request by filling out the form below.

    What we do

    We provide technological support and legal feedback to victims of image-Based Sexual Abuse (IBSA), online violence and hate attacks.

    We develop and implement technologies, strategies, and policies to prevent the proliferation of Image-Based Sexual Abuse (also known as NCII and “Revenge Porn”) and other forms of online violence and hate.

    We do this through identification, reporting, and removal of content from the major online platforms.

    How we can help you

    We can help you for free:

    • Prioritizing reports to platforms for content removal
    • Providing legal feedback with expert lawyers
    • Preventing the re-uploading of content
    • Creating digital evidence useful for initiating legal action
    • Offering psychological support

    To other professionals, press or institutions journalistic we offer:

    • Access to Tools and Technologies for Law Enforcement
    • Data monitoring and reporting
    • Support with a Technical Team

    To Institutional/governmental entities we offer:

    • Support in Educational Processes
    • Support in Policy Writing
    • Customized training projects

    The stories

    Our association firmly believes in the protection of privacy and the right to oblivion for victims: on our channels you will never find explicit references to news events, which amplify their visibility.

    However, we think it is important to tell what the daily work of our help line, the first line that responds directly to requests for help, consists of, including through the testimonies of the victims themselves: to protect their privacy, the names and references used are made up and do not correspond to reality.

    "Since last night I feel dizzy, raped and don't know how to move. I want to report it, but I feel ashamed."

    Lucia contacted us after discovering that some intimate videos depicting her were uploaded to several adult content platforms.

    The materials, recorded in an intimate moment with their partner a few years earlier, turned into a waking nightmare.

    His fault according to his former partner? Ending a relationship that was no longer functional.

    Within a few hours Lucia felt overwhelmed by a wave of emotions that are hard to explain: from anger to shame, from guilt to disbelief, but most of all a lot of fear.

    "I made an erotic video call with a person I met online and found out I was secretly filmed. Now he is threatening me to spread the video."

    Dario is one of the many victims of sextortion, a solicitation crime that occurs when a person is contacted by a fake profile asking in most cases for an erotic video chat in order to acquire content for the purpose of extortion.

    They asked Dario for 5,000 euros so that the video would not be sent to all his contacts.

    "I really thought I could trust him and that we were building something important."

    Chiara met David online and they immediately hit it off: they wrote and talked for several months, unable to meet because they live in two different countries.

    They also made erotic video calls and exchanged intimate photos.

    Chiara feels she can trust David, even though they have never met in person.

    One day David appears harsh, aloof, tells her that he has financial problems and that if she does not help him he will be “forced” to share online the intimate photos Chiara invited him.