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From the experience of running a similar site.

1. Monitor only most-viewed pages as 99% of images nobody will never see again, not the uploader nor the law agencies. The page must have some traffic to be discovered. Just make a page "top 200 today" and have a look from time to time.

2. "report nsfw" button does not work. The pedophiles do not report, the rest have no chance to hit the pedo-page.

3. Almost all the pedo-uploaders use Tor. Check how many non-pedophiles use Tor and consider to block IPs of exit nodes (or make Tor-uploaded images initially hidden until reviewed).

4. Own your IP address or setup a relationship with the owner of your site's IP. Law enforcers send email to them (or to you and CC: to them). If "whois $YOURIP" shows not your email but for example abuse@digitalocean.com or abuse@azure.com then your server have a good chance to be disconnected hours before you would know why).

5. About the big players - at least Twitter has a lot of pedo-content (my service is screenshot-oriented and I have seen many screenshots of Twitter pages with CP). "how does the organic traffic in the nsfw sections play into the strategy of these huge user-generated content sites" - very good question, I would like to know as well.

6. About the advice from comments to check images in the porn context. It does not work. SFW-images are very clickable being surrounded by NSWF (think of a portrait of a celebrity in the context).

PS. My advices may look as semi-measures, but they provide the same level of quality as Machine Learning or Mechanical Turk solutions (which are not endloesungen as well) for lower price.


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