Mental wellness is important for everyone. Discord is partnering with Crisis Text Line, a nonprofit that provides 24/7 text-based mental health support and crisis intervention via trained volunteer Crisis Counselors.
If you report a message for self-harm within the Discord mobile app, you will be presented with information on how to connect with a Crisis Text Line volunteer Crisis Counselor. You can also text ‘DISCORD’ to 741741 to reach Crisis Text Line counselors available 24/7 to help you or a friend through any mental health crisis. Our goal is to enable users to get the help they need for themselves, or empower others to get help, as quickly as possible.
Crisis Text Line is available to those in the United States and is offered in both English and Spanish.
We’re constantly improving and expanding our approach to teen safety and wellbeing on Discord. That’s why we’re proud to support the Digital Wellness Lab at Boston Children’s Hospital to help ground our approach to teen safety and belonging in the latest scientific research and best practices. The Digital Wellness Lab at Boston Children’s Hospital convenes leaders in technology, scientific research, healthcare, child development, media, entertainment, and education to deepen understanding and address the future of how young people can engage healthily with media and technology. We’re excited to work with the Digital Wellness Lab to help develop ways to better support teen mental health, both online and off.
Back-to-school season is a great time for families to rethink and reset their relationship with technology. To help out, Discord is rolling out a new program with National PTA to help families and educators discuss ways to foster positive relationships and build belonging in our digital world. Through the program, free resources will be provided, along with breakout activities and digital safety tips for families. As part of National PTA’s PTA Connected program, Discord will also fund 30 grants for local high school PTAs to pilot the program during the 2022–2023 school year.
Parents, want some help starting a conversation about digital safety with your family or at your school? Check out National PTA’s PTA Connected page for everything you need.
Beyond our work with Crisis Text Line, Digital Wellness Lab, and National PTA, we continue to build out efforts and resources that help people on Discord build belonging and support one another to overcome the impossible. Finding a community that is navigating similar challenges can be incredibly helpful for healing.
That said, platforms have a critical role to play to ensure these digital spaces don’t attempt to normalize or promote hurtful behaviors or encourage other users to engage in acts of self-harm. We recently expanded our Self Harm Encouragement and Promotion Policy to ensure this type of content is addressed on Discord. We do not allow any content or behavior that promotes or encourages individuals to commit acts of self-harm on Discord. We also prohibit content that seeks to normalize self-harming behaviors, as well as content that discourages individuals from seeking help for self-harm behaviors.
We’re committed to mental wellbeing and helping our users uplift each other and their communities. Our newly-implemented partnerships and resources developed with the support of the Crisis Text Line, Digital Wellness Lab, and National PTA are an important addition to our ongoing work to give everyone the power to create space to find belonging in their lives.
Introducing our new Teen Safety Assist initiative: Teen Safety Assist is focused on further protecting teens by introducing a new series of features, including multiple safety alerts and sensitive content filters that will be default enabled for teen users.
Starting next week, we’re excited to release the first two features of the Teen Safety Assist initiative. Teens have shared that they like tools that help them avoid unwanted direct messages (DMs) and media. To support this, we’re rolling out safety alerts on senders and sensitive content filters that automatically blur media that may be sensitive — even if the sender doesn’t initially blur it with a spoiler tag.
We’ve partnered with technology non-profit Thorn to design these features together based on their guidance on teen online safety behaviors and what works best to help protect teens. Our partnership has focused on empowering teens to take control over safety and how best to guide teens to helpful tips and resources.
We’re grateful for the support of Thorn to ensure we build the right protections and empower teens with the tools and resources they need to have a safer online experience.
The first two features of the Teen Safety initiative will start rolling out globally in November 2023 and will be turned on by default for teen users. Stay tuned for many more features from this initiative as we look ahead to the next year.
We know mistakes happen and rules are accidentally broken. Our new Warning System includes multiple touchpoints so users can easily understand rule violations and the consequences. These touchpoints provide more transparency into Discord interventions, letting users know how their violation may impact their overall account standing and gives information for them to do better in the future.
We built this system so users can learn how to do better in the future and help keep all hangouts safe.
Some violations are more serious than others, and we’ll take appropriate action depending on the severity of the violation. For example, we have and will continue to have a zero-tolerance policy towards violent extremism and content that sexualizes children.
The Warning System is built based on our teen-centric policies. This is a multi-year, focused effort to invest more deeply and holistically into our teen safety efforts. We incorporate teen-centric philosophies in how we enforce our policies, assess risks of new products with Safety by Design, and communicate our policies in an age-appropriate manner.
For the Warning System, this means that we consider how teens are growing, learning, and taking age-appropriate risks as they mature, and we give them more opportunities to learn from mistakes rather than punish them harshly.
The Warning System starts rolling out today in select regions. Stay tuned for many more updates to our Warning System in the future.
For our server moderators and admins, we’ve recently expanded their safety toolkit with new features that allow them to proactively identify potentially unsafe activity, such as server raids and DM spam, and take swift actions as needed.
We began rolling these tools in September to Community Servers, and now we’re rolling them out to all servers.
While you might be an open book with your friends, having your personal business out there for everyone to see can feel a bit weird. That’s why you get to decide, from server to server, how much you want to share and how easy it is to contact you.
With Server Profiles, you can adjust to how you present yourself in different spaces, allowing you to be as much of the real “you” as you feel comfortable being in any particular group.
You can also always try turning on Message Requests: a feature that sends any DM from someone new into a separate inbox and requires your approval before that user can DM you again. Or, go the extra mile and turn off DMs entirely from server members unless you’ve explicitly added them to your friends list.
PHEW, okay… that was a lot. Thanks for stickin’ around and jamming through our most recent updates with us. Everything you could ever want to know about safety and privacy on Discord, and even more if you’re the learning type of person, lives in our Safety Library — check it out for more tips on making Discord safe and comfortable for you.
This article was first published on 10/24/2023.
At Discord, we’re constantly working to make our platform the best place for our users, including teens, to hang out with their friends online. An important part of doing this the right way is listening to teen users' concerns and ideas directly.
Since the end of 2023, we’ve conducted 30 focus groups globally to speak with teens about their firsthand experiences and perspectives on how to shape Discord’s features to meet their needs. We collected ideas from teens and global organizations specializing in teen safety — like Digital Wellness Lab, NoFiltr’s Youth Innovation Council, and ThinkYoung — to create an aspirational charter that helps us understand how teens want to feel on Discord.
We learned about what tools — like muting a conversation or tailoring who can send you a friend request — are most helpful for teens to remediate uncomfortable situations. We also heard new ideas for additional safety and privacy features that have helped shape our product focus.
Teens have spoken, and we have taken what they said to heart. We learned a ton when speaking with our teen users, and we’re excited to reveal our co-created Teen Charter.
The Teen Charter outlines the principles that matter most to them: authenticity, inclusivity, privacy, and transparency. This set of principles represents the expectations teens have of each other and of Discord.
While our Community Guidelines explain what is and what isn’t allowed on Discord, we hope the Teen Charter principles will ultimately guide users to take on a shared responsibility in creating a fun and comfortable space to play and chill with their friends. These principles will also help inform product and policy improvements on Discord, serving as a guiding beacon for us to help teen users thrive.
We want to help teens forge and maintain genuine friendships, and we know that can only happen when they feel safe connecting with one another on our platform.
We’re excited to announce the launch of our Guardian’s Guide to help guardians and parents better understand Discord, how the platform works, and equip them with the tools needed to check in with teens and start conversations about building positive online behaviors.
We know guardians have a lot of great resources to help their teens navigate the online world, but we wanted to provide a resource about Discord, from Discord. The Guardian’s Guide is a centralized asset that helps adults who are raising teens understand the latest highlights of how Discord works, information on how their teen might spend time on Discord, and shares tips and resources to talk to teens about keeping their online experiences comfortable. We consistently offer updated info on our Safety Center, but this resource helps streamline these topics.
We’re excited about the resources we shared today. Like, really excited. In fact, we’re so excited that we’re doing a giveaway!
Today, guardians and teens based in the United States can enter to win our giveaway on TikTok, X or Instagram for a chance to win a back-to-school pack, including exclusive items such as a Teen Charter pickleball paddle and a Guardian’s Guide brochure. Start the new school year with some Discord flare!
To learn more about how we approach safety and privacy here at Discord, we have plenty of more resources in our regularly-updated Safety Center.
Our guidelines state that users may not organize, promote, or engage in the buying, selling, or trading of dangerous and regulated goods. This has always been our policy and will not be changing.
We want to use this opportunity to talk a little bit more about what we consider to be a “dangerous and regulated good” and how this policy will apply:
To help put this policy into context, here are some examples of situations we would and would not take action against under this policy:
We may take any number of enforcement actions in response to users and servers that are attempting to buy, sell, or trade dangerous and regulated goods on Discord — including warning an account, server, or entire moderator team; removing harmful content; and permanently suspending an account or server.
After receiving feedback from our community, we are evaluating the potential for unintended consequences and negative impacts of the age-restricted requirement. Our existing guidelines on Dangerous and Regulated Goods remain as stated, however we are assessing how best to support server moderators regarding the age-restricted requirement and to ensure we are not preventing positive online engagement.
We regularly evaluate and assess our policies to ensure Discord remains a safe and welcoming place, and plan to update our Community Guidelines in the coming months. We will provide any important updates on this policy then.
The full list of content and behaviors not allowed on Discord can be found in our Community Guidelines. Our Safety Center and Policy & Safety Blog are also great resources if you would like to read more about our approach to safety and our policies.
Editor's Note: On July 1 2024, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that moderation decisions are protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. You can read our response to this ruling here.
Today, Discord filed an amicus brief with the Supreme Court in support of our ongoing efforts to create online communities of shared interests that are safe, welcoming, and inclusive. The cases at issue (Moody v. NetChoice, et al. and NetChoice et al. v. Paxton) challenge the constitutionality of two new laws in Texas and Florida. You may have heard of them: these laws would significantly restrict the ability of online services to remove content that is objectionable to their users and force them to keep a wide range of “lawful but awful” content on their sites. Discord is not a traditional social media service, but whether intended or not, the laws are broad enough to likely impact services like ours.
It’s hard to overstate the potential impact if these laws are allowed to go into effect: they would fundamentally change how services like Discord operate, and with that, the experiences we deliver to you. There’s no doubt that the outcome here is hugely important to us as a company, but that alone is not why we are taking a stand. Ultimately, we filed this brief because important context was missing from the official record: you all and the vibrant communities you’ve built on Discord.
Taking a step back, Discord has invested heavily in creating safe and fun online spaces. Our Community Guidelines set the rules for how we all engage on Discord, and we put a lot of effort into enforcing them: around 15% of the company works on safety, including content moderation. This includes Trust and Safety agents who enforce Discord’s rules, engineers who develop moderation tools for both Discord and its users, and many more dedicated individuals across our company.
We do this work so that you can create those online spaces where you can find and foster genuine connection. But in order to bring this world to life, Discord needs to be able to prevent, detect, and remove harmful speech and conduct. Barring companies like Discord from moderating content is a little like barring garbage collection in a city: every individual block would have to devote its own resources to hauling its own garbage, diverting those limited resources from more productive activities and the individualized curation that makes each neighborhood unique. So, while our rules and content moderation efforts certainly reflect our own values and speech about the kind of services we want to offer, we really do it for you all—we work to take care of the hard stuff so you all can focus on creating the communities you want.
That’s why we decided to take such a strong position in these cases: we want to make sure the Supreme Court understands how these laws would impact your speech and your communities. Fortunately, the First Amendment has a lot to say about this–it protects your association rights, which make it possible for you to come together around your shared interests and see content that is relevant and helpful, not harmful.
Keeping your communities fun and safe by not allowing harmful content is a top priority for us. We wouldn’t be doing what we do without all of you, and we will keep working to make sure you can create the online spaces you want.
You can read an overview of the following policies here.
Teen Self-Endangerment Policy
Teen self-endangerment is a nuanced issue that we do not take lightly. We want our teen users to be able to express themselves freely on Discord while also taking steps to ensure these users don’t engage in risky behaviors that might endanger their safety and well-being.
In order to help our teenage users stay safe, our policies state that users under the age of 18 are not allowed to send or access any sexually explicit content. Even when this kind of content is shared consensually between teens, there is a risk that self-generated sexual media can be saved and shared outside of their private conversations. We want to help our users avoid finding themselves in these situations.
In this context, we also believe that dating online can result in self-endangerment. Under this policy, teen dating servers are prohibited on Discord and we will take action against users who are engaging in this behavior. Additionally, older teens engaging in the grooming of a younger teen will be reviewed and actioned under our Inappropriate Sexual Conduct with Children and Grooming Policy.
Through our thorough work and partnership with a prominent child safety organization, we determined that we will, when possible, warn teens who have engaged in sexually explicit behavior before moving to a full ban. An example of this includes teens sharing explicit content with each other that is not their own content.
Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) and Child Sexualization Policy
Discord has a zero-tolerance policy for child sexual abuse, which does not have a place on our platform — or anywhere in society.
We do not allow CSAM on Discord, including AI-generated photorealistic CSAM. When such imagery is found, the imagery is reported to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC). This ensures that the sexualization of children in any context is not normalized by bad actors.
Inappropriate Sexual Conduct with Teens and Grooming Policy
Discord has a zero-tolerance policy for inappropriate sexual conduct with children and grooming. Grooming is inappropriate sexual contact between adults and teens on the platform, with special attention given to predatory behaviors such as online enticement and the sexual extortion of children, commonly referred to as “sextortion.” When we become aware of these types of incidents, we take appropriate action, including banning the accounts of offending adult users and reporting them to NCMEC, which subsequently works with local law enforcement.
Our Safety team works hard to find and remove abhorrent, harmful content, and take action including banning the users responsible and engaging with the proper authorities.
Discord’s Safety by Design practice includes a risk assessment process during the product development cycle that helps identify and mitigate potential risks to user safety. We recognize that teens have unique vulnerabilities in online settings and this process allows us to better safeguard their experience. Through this process, we think carefully about how product features might disproportionately impact teens and consider whether the product facilitates more teen-to-adult interactions and/or any unintended harm. Our teams identify and strategize ways to mitigate safety risks with internal safety technology solutions during this process and through getting insight and recommendations from external partners.
Discord uses a mix of proactive and reactive tools to remove content that violates our policies, from the use of advanced technology like machine learning models and PhotoDNA image hashing to partnering with community moderators to uphold our policies and providing in-platform reporting mechanisms to surface violations.
Our Terms of Service require people to be over a minimum age (13, unless local legislation mandates an older age) to access our website. We use an age gate that asks users to provide their date of birth upon creating an account. If a user is reported as being under 13, we delete their account. Users can only appeal to restore their account by providing an official ID document to verify their age. Additionally, we require that all age-restricted content is placed in a channel clearly labeled as age-restricted, which triggers an age gate, preventing users under 18 from accessing that content.
The newest launches of safety products are focused on helping to safeguard the teen experience with our safety alerts on senders that educate teens on ways they can control their experience and limit unwanted contact. Additionally, sensitive content filters provide additional controls for teens to blur or block unwanted content. Rather than assigning prescriptive solutions for teens, we aim to empower teens with respect for their agency, privacy, and decision-making power.
Additionally, we are expanding our own Trusted Reporter Network in collaboration with INHOPE for direct communication with expert third parties, including researchers, industry peers, and journalists for intelligence sharing.
Machine learning has proven to be an essential component of safety solutions at Discord. Since our acquisition of Sentropy, a leader in AI-powered moderation systems, we have continued to balance technology with the judgment and contextual assessment of highly trained employees, along with continuing to maintain our strong stance on user privacy.
Below is an overview of some of our key investments in technology:
Teen Safety Assist: Teen Safety Assist is focused on further protecting teens by introducing a new series of features, including multiple safety alerts and sensitive content filters that will be default-enabled for teen users.
Safety Rules Engine: The Safety Rules Engine allows our teams to evaluate user activities on the platform, including registrations, server joins, and other metadata. We then analyze patterns of problematic behavior to make informed decisions and take uniform actions like user challenges or bans.
AutoMod: Automod is a powerful tool for community moderators to automatically filter unwanted messages with certain keywords, block profiles that may be impersonating a server admin or appear harmful to their server, and detect harmful messages using machine learning. This technology empowers community moderators to keep their communities safe without having to spend long hours manually reviewing and removing unwanted content on their servers.
Visual safety platform: Discord has continued to invest in improving image classifiers for content such as sexual, gore, and violent media. With these, our machine learning models are being improved to reach higher precision detection rates with lower error rates and decrease teen exposure to potentially inappropriate and mature content. We proactively scan images uploaded to our platform using PhotoDNA to detect child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and report any CSAM content and perpetrators to NCMEC, who subsequently work with local law enforcement to take appropriate action.
Investing in technological advancements and tools to proactively detect CSAM and grooming is a key priority for us, and we have a dedicated team to handle related content. In Q2 2023, we proactively removed 99% of servers found to be hosting CSAM. You can find more information in Discord’s latest Transparency Report.
There is constant innovation taking place within and beyond Discord to improve how companies can effectively scale and deliver content moderation. Our approach will continue to evolve as time goes on, as we’re constantly finding new ways to do better for our users.
Partnerships
We know that collaboration is important, and we’re continuously working with experts and partners so that we have a holistic and informed approach to combating the sexual exploitation of children. We’re grateful to collaborate with the Tech Coalition and NoFiltr to help young people stay safer on Discord.
With our new series of products under the Teen Safety Assist initiative, Discord has launched a safety alert for teens to help flag when a teen might want to double-check that they want to reply to a particular new direct message. We’ve partnered with technology non-profit Thorn to design these features together based on their guidance on teen online safety behaviors and what works best to help protect teens. Our partnership is focused on empowering teens to take control over safety and how best to guide teens to helpful tips and resources.
Want to learn more about Discord’s safety work? Check out these resources below:
We look forward to continuing this important work and deepening our partnerships to ensure we continue to have a holistic and nuanced approach to teen and child safety.
Hate or harm targeted at individuals or communities is not tolerated on Discord in any way, and combating this behavior and content is a top priority for us. We evolved our Threats Policy to address threats of harm to others. Under this policy, we will take action against direct and indirect threats, veiled threats, those who encourage this behavior, and conditional statements to cause harm.
We also refined our Hate Speech Policy with input from a group of experts who study identity and intersectionality and came from a variety of different identities and backgrounds themselves. Under this policy, we define “hate speech” as any form of expression that denigrates, vilifies, or dehumanizes; promotes intense, irrational feelings of enmity or hatred; or incites harm against people based on protected characteristics.
In addition, we’ve expanded our list of protected characteristics to go beyond what most hate speech laws cover to include the following: age; caste; color; disability; ethnicity; family responsibilities; gender; gender identity; housing status; national origin; race; refugee or immigration status; religious affiliation; serious illness; sex; sexual orientation; socioeconomic class and status; source of income; status as a victim of domestic violence, sexual violence, or stalking; and, weight and size.
Last year, we wrote about how we address Violent Extremism on Discord. We are deeply committed to our work in this space and have updated our Violent Extremism Policy to prohibit any kind of support, promotion, or organization of violent extremist groups or ideologies. We worked closely with a violent extremism subject-matter expert to update this policy and will continue to work with third-party organizations like the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism and the European Union Internet Forum to ensure it is enforced properly.
During 2022, we invested significantly in how we combat criminal activity on Discord. In February, we released two blogs to help users identify and protect themselves against scams on Discord. Alongside these, we developed a Financial Scams Policy which prohibits three types of common scams: identity scams, investment scams, and financial scams. We will take action against users who scam others or use Discord to coordinate scamming operations. In the case of users who have been the victim of fraudulent activity, we recommend they report the activity to Discord and contact law enforcement, who will be able to follow up with us for more information if it helps their investigation.
Under our new Fraud Services Policy, we've expanded our definitions of what constitutes fraudulent behavior. We will take action against users who engage in reselling stolen or ill-gotten digital goods or are involved in coordinated efforts to defraud businesses or engage in price gouging, forgery, or money laundering.
We also do not allow any kind of activity that could damage or compromise the security of an account, computer network, or system under our updated Malicious Conduct Policy. We will take action against users who use Discord to host or distribute malware, or carry out phishing attempts and denial-of-service attacks against others.
User safety is our top priority and we’re committed to ensuring Discord continues to be a safe and welcoming place. We regularly evaluate and assess our policies in collaboration with experts, industry-leading groups, and partner organizations. We look forward to continuing our work in this important area and plan to share further updates down the road.
We invested a substantial amount of time and resources into combating spam in 2022, disabling 141,087,602 accounts for spam or spam-related offenses, with a proactive removal rate of 99%, before we receive a user report.
We observed a significant increase in the number of accounts disabled during the third quarter of 2022, leading to an elevated but lower fourth quarter, and then to a substantial decrease in the first quarter of 2023. These trends can be attributed to both increased and ongoing investments in our anti-spam team and a shift in our approach to reducing the number of disabled accounts by placing greater confidence in our proactive spam mitigations and avoiding false positives. As a result, only .004% of accounts disabled submitted an appeal during the past quarter.
Spammers are constantly evolving and adapting to new technologies and methods of detection, moving to use new parts of the platform to target users. Combating spam requires a multi-faceted approach that employs new tools and technologies, while also remaining vigilant and adaptable to changing trends. We're constantly updating our approach to remove spam, and as our proactive efforts have increased, we've observed a steady decline in the number of reports we receive for spam.
The above trends were made possible over the past year due to a number of technological advances in both back-end and front-end features, products, and tools to help prevent and remove spam from Discord.
Discord is committed to combating spam and building a safer environment for people to find belonging. We've grown our teams, shipped new features, products, and tools, and continue to listen closely to users about how spam impacts their experience on Discord.
We're constantly updating our approach to remove spam and remain vigilant and adaptable to changing trends. We will continue to prioritize safety and work hard to combat spam in order to help make Discord the best place for people and communities to hang out online.
To understand how the tech industry is working to solve these challenges, it’s helpful to understand the technology itself.
The industry standard for CSAM detection is a tool called PhotoDNA, which was developed by Microsoft and donated to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC)—the nationally recognized hub for reporting suspected online child sexual exploitation in the US.
When imagery depicting child sexual abuse is reported to NCMEC, PhotoDNA is used to create a unique digital signature (or “hash”) of that image. That hash—and not the illegal imagery itself—is stored in a database that serves as a reference point for online detection efforts.
At Discord, we proactively scan images using hashing algorithms (including PhotoDNA) to detect known CSAM. For example, if someone uploads an image that matches against known CSAM that has been previously reported, we automatically detect it, remove it, and flag it for internal review. When we confirm that someone attempted to share illegal imagery, we remove the content, permanently ban them from our platform, and report them to NCMEC, who subsequently works with law enforcement.
There are more than 6.3 million hashes of CSAM in NCMEC’s hash database and more than 29 million hashes of CSAM contained in databases from around the world. That gives the tech industry a strong foundation for stopping the spread of this harmful material on our platforms. But there’s one key limitation: it only detects exact or similar copies of images that are already logged in the database. This means that predatory actors will try to exploit this weakness with unknown CSAM that has yet to be seen or logged, indicating that there is either a likelihood of active abuse, or the images were synthetically generated using AI.
Unknown CSAM has continually plagued our industry and our team felt it was important to advance our own detection capabilities. We started with an open-source model that can analyze images to understand what they are depicting. Our engineers experimented and found that we could use this model to not only determine how similar one image is to another, but due to the semantic understanding of the model, it also demonstrated promising results for novel CSAM detection.
When we find a match, we follow the same process that we use for PhotoDNA matches: A human reviews it to verify if it is an instance of CSAM. If it is, it’s reported to NCMEC and added to the PhotoDNA database. From that point, the newly verified image can be detected automatically across platforms. This speeds up the review process, expands the database of known CSAM, and makes everyone better and faster at blocking CSAM over time. This is a major advancement in the effort to detect, report, and stop the spread of CSAM.
At a recent Tech Coalition hackathon, engineers from Discord and other tech companies collaborated on ways we can work together to identify new forms of CSAM that evade existing detection methods. During this collaboration, we were able to work to make the AI-powered detection mechanism we built open-source. At Discord, we believe safety shouldn’t be proprietary or a competitive advantage. Our hope is that by making this technology open source, we can bring new capabilities and protections to all tech platforms, especially newer companies that don’t yet have established trust and safety teams.
This is part of our work alongside the Lantern program, which is committed to stopping people from evading CSAM detection across platforms. Together, we’re working to increase prevention and detection methods, accelerate identification processes, share information on predatory tactics, and strengthen our collective reporting to authorities.
Ultimately, this is an ideal use of machine learning technology. It’s important to note, though, that human expertise and judgment is still involved. Our expert staff continues to review anything that’s not an exact match with PhotoDNA, because the stakes are high and we need to get it right. What matters most is that the combined efforts of machine learning and human expertise are making it harder than ever for predatory actors to evade detection.
Safety is a top priority at Discord. It’s reflected in our personnel: roughly 15% of our staff is dedicated to safety. These teams work to ensure our platform, features, and policies result in a positive and safe place for our users to hang out and build community.
The safety landscape is continually shifting. There are always new challenges emerging, and no single entity can tackle them alone.
Our industry can lead by sharing tools, intelligence, and best practices. We also need to work collaboratively with policymakers, advocacy groups, and academics to fully understand emerging threats and respond to them. Initiatives like Lantern and organizations like the Tech Coalition represent the kind of collaborative efforts that make it possible for us all to better stay ahead of bad actors and work together towards a universally safe online experience for everyone.
As soon as we start building something new, we assess the risks that might come from it. By starting at the concept phase, we can factor safety into everything we do as we design, build, launch, and manage a new product.
Throughout the process, our teams weigh in with specialized knowledge in their domains, including teen safety, counter-extremism, cybercrime, security, privacy, and spam. Functionally, this is how we pinpoint any gaps that may exist as we build the products and features that make Discord a fun, safe place to hang out with friends.
Any time we build something, we prioritize four key questions to determine our approach to building safer products:
There are some things we consider with each product. We’ll look, for instance, at our data to learn more about the most common kinds of violations that are related to what we’re building. That can help us understand the most harmful and most abundant violations we know about today.
But our products don’t all have the same behaviors or content, so we can’t just copy-paste our work from one tool to another. Think of the Family Center or voice messages, for example. They have unique purposes and functions, so we needed different answers to each of the questions above as we built them. By starting with these questions on day one, we were able to make the right decisions for each tool at each step of the process and maximize our approach to safety in the end.
By following this approach, everyone involved in making our products has a clear-eyed and honest understanding of the risks that could potentially arise from our work. We make intentional decisions to minimize those risks and commit to only releasing something if it meets our high standard of safety.
Let’s look a little deeper at voice messages, the feature that lets you record audio on your phone and easily send it to your friends. Here’s a brief rundown of how we incorporated safety conversations into every aspect of bringing this fun tool to life.
At the earliest stage, the product team drew up preliminary specifications and consulted with trust and safety subject matter experts on staff. The product manager shared the specs with individuals from the policy and legal teams, with a focus on flagging any concerns or discrepancies regarding Discord’s own policies.
Once initial feedback was incorporated, the product manager created an action plan, bringing on the engineers who began building the feature. Even during this stage, safety experts were part of the process. In fact, it was here that members of the safety team called for an additional requirement—a way for us to handle large amounts of audio messages. Just as users can report written messages, they also can report audio messages for content that violates our policies. Our safety teams needed to ensure we had a way to review those reports effectively as they flow in.
In this instance, the team had to figure out how the audio review process would even work. Would reviewers have to sit and listen to hours of reported messages each day? That didn’t seem viable, so the core team decided to use existing text tools that could transcribe reported messages. Now reviewers can evaluate the text quickly, and review the audio for additional context.
Once again, the product manager and engineers worked closely with the safety team to include building in this additional layer of safety.
Just because our voice messages feature is live doesn’t mean our safety job is complete. We need to understand how effective our methods are, so we’ve developed metrics that track safety and give us insight into the impacts of the decisions we’ve made.
We track, for instance, if we have unusual rates of flagged content or appeals on decisions, as well as the breakdown of various violations on our platform. We summarize these metrics in our quarterly Transparency Reports.
To better understand our safety-centric approach, consider the alternative.
A different platform could start with an innovative idea and the best intentions. It could build the product it thinks would be most exciting for users, and review the risk and safety implications when it’s ready to go live. If the company identifies risks at a late stage, it has to decide what to address before releasing the product to the world.
This can happen and is flawed. If you’re already at the finish line when you notice the risks you’ve created, you might realize you have to start over to do it right. Building a product this way is risky, and users are the ones most exposed to those risks.
At Discord, we understand that we have to think about safety and growth holistically.
Discord is built differently from other platforms. We don't chase virality or impressions. Discord makes money by providing users a great experience through premium subscriptions. Under this model, we can focus on our users and have more freedom to prioritize safety.
Put simply, we’re only interested in growing a platform that’s safe. We’re here to help people forge genuine friendships, and we know that can only happen when people feel safe connecting with one another.
Safer Internet Day was created by advocacy organizations as a way to raise awareness around online safety. It has since expanded into an opportunity for industry, government, and civil society to come together to share online safety and digital well-being best practices.
Making the internet a better, safer place for everyone is a tall task — and we know we can’t do it alone. Last year, as part of our ongoing partnership with the National Parent Teacher Association, we co-hosted an event featuring some of our teen moderators talking about belonging and mental health in online spaces. We’ve continued this partnership with the PTA Connected: Build up and Belong Program. This program helps families explore the use of technology as a communication and relationship tool, discusses ways to build belonging and positive communities in our digital world, teaches how to navigate privacy and safety on digital platforms, and helps families have interactive conversations about online scenarios, experiences and expectations.
We’re committed to helping build a safer internet on Safer Internet Day and beyond. To continue that mission, Discord has partnered with several international leaders in the online safety space.
This year, we’re teaming up with NoFiltr to help educate Discord users on the importance of safer internet practices to empower people to use Discord and other platforms in a smart and healthy manner. One of the ways we’ll be working together is by engaging with NoFiltr’s Youth Innovation Council to co-develop educational resources that connect to users where they are.
For this year’s Safer Internet Day, Discord and NoFiltr, with help from the Youth Innovation Council, are launching the “What’s Your Online Digital Role?” quiz. We believe that everyone can play a part in helping make online communities a safe and inclusive space, and this interactive quiz can help you figure out what role best suits you when it comes to being a part of and building a safe community. Take the quiz here to find out.
Discord is partnering with Childnet UK and Internet Sans Crainte, two European Safer Internet Centers dedicated to increasing awareness and education about better online safety practices for youth.
In addition, we’ll be hosting a roundtable event in Brussels where policymakers, civil society thought leaders, and industry partners will come together to share insights, discuss challenges, and discuss steps we can take together to make Discord and the internet a safer place for young people.
We also wanted to provide materials and tools that everyone can use to help facilitate healthy and open conversation about online safety — it’s not so easy approaching difficult or sensitive topics when it comes to talking about your experiences online.
To help kick start these important discussions in a more approachable way, we’ve made a print-at-home fortune teller filled with questions and icebreaker prompts that can help you lead a conversation about better digital health and safer online practices.
Interested in your own Safer Internet Day fortune teller? Check out our Safer Internet Day home page on Discord’s Safety Center, where you can print out and assemble your very own fortune teller.
We’ll be showcasing how to use this resource with our communities as part of our Safer Internet Day celebration.
We’ll be celebrating Safer Internet Day in the publicly-joinable Discord Town Hall server with an event all about Safety, including a walk-through of the fortune teller activity. You can join Discord official Town Hall server for the event happening on February 7th, 2023.
At Discord, we are deeply committed to helping communities thrive on our platform. Our teams are always working to make Discord an even more accessible and welcoming place to hang out online with your friends and build your community. Here are a couple of safety highlights from the last year:
In June, we debuted our new automated moderation tool, AutoMod, for community owners and admins looking for an easier way to keep communities and conversations welcoming and to empower them to better handle bad actors who distribute malicious language, harmful scams or links, and spam.
Today, AutoMod is hard at work in over 390,000 servers, reducing the workload for thousands of community moderators everywhere. So far, we’ve removed over 20 million unwanted messages — that’s 20 million less actions keeping moderators away from actually enjoying and participating in the servers they tend to. Check out our AutoMod blog post if you’re interested in getting AutoMod up and running in your community.
Spam is a problem on Discord, and we treat this issue with the same level as any other problem that impacts your ability to talk and hang out on Discord. That’s why this year, we’ve increased the amount of time and resources into refining our policies and operational procedures to more efficiently and accurately target bad actors. We’ve had over 140 million spam takedowns in 2022, and we’ll continue to remove spam from our platform in the future. Read more about Discord’s efforts to combat spam on our platform here.
Wanna learn more about online safety? How you can keep yourself and others safer online? We’ve gathered these resources to help give you a head start:
We’re excited to announce that starting today, we’re rolling out passwordless login with biometric passkeys to streamline and safeguard your sign-in experience as well as default end-to-end encryption for audio and video (E2EE A/V) calls.
Read on to see how these two features will help make your time on Discord safer, for both you and your friends on the call!
Passwords are annoying to remember and are not the most secure (yes, that includes “wumpu2-1s-c00l”). We provide various forms of multi-factor authentication (MFA) to protect your account, but we wanted to continue to prioritize security with a more seamless experience.
Now, you can register a passkey to your Discord account, secured by on-device biometric features such as Face ID or Touch ID, to sign in with just one easy step.
Discord can’t access your biometric data, and helps ensure that nobody but you can use your passkey to sign into your account. Your passkey lives on your device, allowing you to seamlessly sign into Discord on any device that has access to that passkey. That’s a win-win-win for privacy, security, and a seamless user experience.
Passwordless login with a passkey keeps your account as protected as possible. You can learn more about setting up a biometric passkey and how to then log in with that passkey here.
Last summer we began experimenting with encryption protocols and technologies for audio and video calls, and we are excited to announce the roll out of our E2EE A/V protocol.
Today, we’ll start automatically migrating audio and video calls in DMs, Group DMs, voice channels, and Go Live streams to a new system that utilizes E2EE A/V. You’ll also be able to verify your end-to-end encrypted call and the identity of the other members in it, giving you peace of mind no one else can listen in.
When we consider adding new privacy features like E2EE A/V, we do not do so in isolation from safety. That is why safety is integrated across our product and policies, and why messages on Discord are unencrypted. Messages will still be subject to our content moderation approach, allowing us to continue offering additional safety protections.
Privacy is an essential part of feeling secure, and we want to be transparent about the security technology we use. That’s why we’ve also published a technical blog to provide more insight into the work, how we got here, our design and implementation goals, and the technical overview of how we built our E2EE A/V protocol. You can also see how we’ve worked closely with external experts to assess risks and develop robust safeguards to build our protocol.
Discord is a place where you can be authentic and should feel safe when talking with your friends - this includes maintaining account security and protecting your privacy. Passwordless login makes sure no baddies can worm their way into your Discord account, and end-to-end encryption has arrived to help keep audio and video calls between you and your friends private.
To enable passwordless login, just head into User Settings > Account and find the section called “Security Keys” to get started!
E2EE A/V is on by default for up-to-date Discord clients on desktop and mobile, and support for other clients such as web and consoles will roll out next year. You can head here to learn how to verify your E2EE A/V calls are truly end-to-end encrypted.
Obsessed with security and privacy? So are we —we’ll continue to prioritize and build products that respect both.
We’re committed to making Discord a safe place for teens to hang out with their friends online. While they’re doing their thing and we’re doing our part to keep them safe, sometimes it’s hard for parents to know what’s actually going on in their teens’ online lives.
Teens navigate the online world with a level of expertise that is often underestimated by the adults in their lives. For parents, it may be a hard lesson to fathom—that their teens know best. But why wouldn’t they? Every teen is their own leading expert in their life experiences (as we all are!). But growing up online, this generation is particularly adept at what it means to make new friends, find community, express their authentic selves, and test boundaries—all online.
But that doesn’t mean teens don’t need adults’ help when it comes to setting healthy digital boundaries. And it doesn’t mean parents can’t be a guide for cultivating safe, age-appropriate spaces. It’s about finding the right balance between giving teens agency while creating the right moments to check in with them.
One of the best ways to do that is to encourage more regular, open and honest conversations with your teen about staying safe online. Here at Discord, we’ve developed tools to help that process, like our Family Center: an opt-in program that makes it easy for parents and guardians to be informed about their teen’s Discord activity while respecting their autonomy.
Here are a few more ways to kick off online safety discussions.
If a teen feels like they could get in trouble for something, they won’t be honest with you. So go into these conversations from a place of curiosity first, rather than judgment.
Here are a few conversation-starters:
Teens will be less likely to share if they feel like parents just don’t get it, so asking open questions like these will foster more conversation. Questions rooted in blame can also backfire: the teen may not be as forthcoming because they feel like the adult is already gearing up to punish them.
Read more helpful prompts for talking with your teen about online safety in our Discord Safety Center.
Our goal at Discord is to make it a place where teens can talk and hang out with their friends in a safe, fun way. It’s a place where teens have power and agency, where they get to feel like they own something.
Just because your teen is having fun online doesn't mean you have to give up your parental role. Parents and trusted adults in a teen’s life are here to coach and guide them, enabling them to explore themselves and find out who they are—while giving them the parameters by which to do so.
On Discord, some of those boundaries could include:
Using Discord’s Family Center feature so you can be more informed and involved in your teens’ online life without prying.
At Discord, we’ve created several tools to help parents stay informed and in touch with their teens online, including this Parent’s Guide to Discord and the Family Center.
In the spirit of meeting teens where they are, we’ve also introduced a lighthearted way to spur conversations through a set of digital safety tarot cards. Popular with Gen Z, tarot cards are a fun way for teens to self-reflect and find meaning in a world that can feel out of control.
The messages shown in the cards encourage teens to be kind and to use their intuition and trust their instincts. They remind teens to fire up their empathy, while also reminding them it’s OK to block those who bring you down.
And no, these cards will (unfortunately) not tell you your future! But they’re a fun way to initiate discussions about online safety and establish a neutral, welcoming space for your teen to share their concerns. They encourage teens to share real-life experiences and stories of online encounters, both positive and negative. The idea is to get young people talking, and parents listening.
Sometimes, even as adults, it's easy to get in over your head online. Through our research with parents and teens, we found that while 30% of parents said their Gen Zer’s emotional and mental health had taken a turn for the worse in the past few years, 55% of Gen Z said it. And while some teens acknowledged that being extremely online can contribute to that, more reported that online communications platforms, including social media, play a positive role in their life through providing meaningful community connection. Understanding healthy digital boundaries and how they can impact mental wellbeing is important, no matter if you’re a teen, parent, or any age in-between.
When it comes to addressing the unique safety needs of each individual, there are resources, such as Crisis Text Line. Trained volunteer Crisis Counselors are available to support anyone in their time of need 24/7. Just text DISCORD to 741741 to receive free and confidential mental health support in English and Spanish.
Because investigations are ongoing, we can only share limited details. What we can say is that the alleged documents were initially shared in a small, invite-only server on Discord. The original server has been deleted, but the materials have since appeared in several additional servers.
Our Terms of Service expressly prohibit using Discord for illegal or criminal purposes. This includes the sharing of documents that may be verifiably classified. Unlike the overwhelming majority of the people who find community on Discord, this group departed from the norms, broke our rules, and did so in apparent violation of the law.
Our mission is for Discord to be the place to hang out with friends online. With that mission comes a responsibility to make Discord a safe and positive place for our users. For example, our policies clearly outline that hate speech, threats and violent extremism have no place on our platform. When Discord’s Trust and Safety team learns of content that violates our rules, we act quickly to remove it. In this instance, we have banned users involved with the original distribution of the materials, deleted content deemed to be against our Terms, and issued warnings to users who continue to share the materials in question.
This recent incident fundamentally represents a misuse of our platform and a violation of our platform rules. Our Terms of Service and Community Guidelines provide the universal rules for what is acceptable activity and content on Discord. When we become aware of violations to our policies, we take action.
The core of our mission is to give everyone the power to find and create belonging in their lives. Creating a safe environment on Discord is essential to achieve this, and is one of the ways we prevent misuse of our platform. Safety is at the core of everything we do and a primary area of investment as a business:
The fight against bad actors on communications platforms is unlikely to end soon, and our approach to safety is guided by the following principles:
Underpinning all of this are two important considerations: our overall approach towards content moderation and our investments in technology solutions to keep our users safe.
We currently employ three levers to moderate user content on Discord, while mindful of user privacy:
There is constant innovation taking place within and beyond Discord to improve how companies can effectively scale and deliver content moderation. In the future, our approach will continue to evolve, as we are constantly finding new ways to do better for our users.
We believe that in the long term, machine learning will be an essential component of safety solutions. In 2021, we acquired Sentropy, a leader in AI-powered moderation systems, to advance our work in this domain. We will continue to balance technology with the judgment and contextual assessment of highly trained employees, as well as continuing to maintain our strong stance on user privacy.
Here is an overview of some of our key investments in technology:
In the field of online safety, we are inspired by the spirit of cooperation across companies and civil society groups. We are proud to engage and learn from a wide range of companies and organizations including:
This cooperation extends to our work with law enforcement agencies. When appropriate, Discord complies with information requests from law enforcement agencies while respecting the privacy and rights of our users. Discord also may disclose information to authorities in emergency situations when we possess a good faith belief that there is imminent risk of serious physical injury or death. You can read more about how Discord works with law enforcement here.
If you would like to learn more about our approach to Safety, we welcome you to visit the links below.
Some of the most recognizable names in tech such as Snap, Google, Twitch, Meta, and Discord unveiled Lantern, a pioneering initiative aimed at thwarting child predators who exploit platform vulnerabilities to elude detection. This vital project marks a significant stride forward in safeguarding children who on average spend up to nine hours a day online. It underscores a critical truth: protecting our children in the digital realm is a shared responsibility, necessitating a unified front from both tech behemoths and emerging players.
The digital landscape must be inherently safe, embedding privacy and security at its core, not merely as an afterthought. This philosophy propelled my journey to Discord, catalyzed by a profound personal reckoning. In 2017, harrowing discussions about children's online experiences triggered a series of panic attacks for me, leading to a restless quest for solutions. This path culminated, with a gentle nudge from my wife, in the creation of a company that used AI to detect online abuse and make the internet safer for everyone, which was later acquired by Discord. This mission has been and remains personal for me!
Discord, now an eight-year-old messaging service with mobile, web, and stand-alone apps and over 150 million monthly users, transcends being just a platform. It's a sanctuary, a space where communities, from gamers to study groups, and notably LGBTQ+ teens, find belonging and safety. Our ethos is distinct: we don't sell user data or clutter experiences with ads. Discord isn’t the place you go to get famous or attract followers. We align our interests squarely with our users, fostering a safe and authentic environment.
However, our non-social media identity doesn't preclude collaboration with social media companies in safeguarding online spaces. Just as physical venues like airports, stadiums and hospitals require tailored security measures, so too do digital platforms need safety solutions that meet their unique architecture. With all the different ways that kids experience life online, a one-size-fits-all approach simply won’t work. This is not a solitary endeavor but a collective, industry-wide mandate. Innovating in safety is as crucial as in product features, requiring open-source sharing of advancements and knowledge. For example, our team at Discord has independently developed new technologies to better detect child sexual abuse material (CSAM), and have chosen to make them open-source so that other platforms can use this technology without paying a penny.
The tech industry must confront head-on the most severe threats online, including sexual exploitation and illegal content sharing. Parents rightfully expect the digital products used by their children to embody these safety principles. Lantern is a pivotal advancement in this ongoing mission.
Yet, as technology evolves, introducing AI, VR, and other innovations, the safety landscape continually shifts, presenting new challenges that no single entity can tackle alone. The millions the tech sector invests must be used to ensure users on our platforms are actually safe, not to persuade Washington that they’re safe. Our industry can lead by sharing with each other and working collaboratively with legislators, advocacy groups, and academics. Collaboration is key—among tech companies, legislators, advocacy groups, and academics— to ensure a universally safe online experience for our children.
The essence of online safety lies in an unprecedented collaborative effort globally. The launch of Lantern is not just a step but a leap forward, signaling a new era of shared responsibility and action in the digital world. It’s time for us to focus on a safer tomorrow!
Not sure how to approach difficult or sensitive topics when it comes to talking about your experiences online? Check out our print-at-home fortune teller filled with questions and icebreaker prompts that can help jump start a conversation about better digital health and safer online practices.
Everyone’s got a role to play in helping make your online communities a safe and inclusive space— wanna find out yours?
For this year’s Safer Internet Day, Discord and NoFiltr, with help from the Youth Innovation Council, are launching the “What’s Your Online Digital Role?” quiz. We believe that everyone can play a part in helping make online communities a safe and inclusive space, and this interactive quiz can help you figure out what role best suits you when it comes to being a part of and building a safe community. Take the quiz here to find out.
We’re committed now more than ever to helping spread the message of Safer Internet Day. In continuing our mission of making your online home a safer one, Discord is partnering with Childnet UK and Internet Sans Crainte, two European Safer Internet Centers dedicated to increasing awareness and education about better online safety practices for youth.
In addition, we’ll be hosting a round table event in Brussels where policymakers, civil society thought leaders, and industry partners will come together to share insights, discuss challenges, and discuss steps we can take together to make Discord and the internet a safer place for young people.
Wanna learn more about online safety how you can keep yourself and others safer online? We’ve gathered these resources to help give you a headstart:
The motto for Safer Internet Day is “together for a better internet.” At Discord, we’re constantly working to make our platform the best place for our users, including teens, to hang out online.
If we want to do this right, we need to ensure people’s voices are heard, especially those of our younger users. We have to engage with youth directly to hear their firsthand experiences and perspectives on how to shape features to meet their needs. That’s why we’re working closely with organizations and teens from around the world to develop an aspirational charter that helps us understand how they want to feel on Discord, while informing the ways we build new products and features to keep them safe on the platform.
We’re consulting the clinical researchers at the Digital Wellness Lab and NoFiltr’s Youth Innovation Council, and engaging our own global focus groups to not only better understand how teens want to feel on Discord, but also what it takes to ensure they feel that way.
Based on our findings, we’ll then partner with teens to co-create a charter that outlines the rights teens have online and the best-case scenarios for authentically expressing themselves and hanging out with friends in digital spaces. While our Community Guidelines explain what isn’t allowed on Discord, these new principles will ultimately guide users to take on a shared responsibility in creating a fun and comfortable space to talk and hang out with their friends.
Recent focus groups have shown us that teens navigate privacy, safety, and authenticity in nuanced and sophisticated ways – and they expect online platforms to do the same. While our research is only getting started, our teen participants have already emphasized the importance of both transparency and respect on platforms in order to feel safe to be authentically themselves.
“Without privacy, the potential for trust is compromised, preventing the free exchange of ideas and hindering the development of a vibrant and supportive online community.” - NoFiltr’s Youth Innovation Council Member, 14
In the spirit of trust and transparency that teens yearn for, we’ll continue to share our processes of developing this charter openly on our Safety Center.
Along with our work on the charter, we’re also partnering with technology non-profit Thorn to build a set of product features to protect and empower teens. Last fall, we announced our Teen Safety Assist initiative with safety alerts on senders and sensitive content filters, and we’re about to release our next feature: safety alerts in chat.
This new feature, which is enabled by default for teens, will give users additional protection to keep all their spaces comfy on Discord. When we detect a message is potentially unwanted, teen users will receive a safety alert in chat to offer protections like blocking or reporting the sender.
The safety alert in chat will include advice on how to tackle an unwanted situation. Teen users will be encouraged to take a break from the conversation, reach out to Crisis Text Line for live help, or visit NoFiltr.org for more resources and safety tips. The feature will start rolling out for English regions in the coming weeks.
Working together with organizations to make the internet a better, safer place is something we’re committed to doing on Safer Internet Day, and every other day of the year. Discord should be a place where everyone has a home to talk, have fun, and just be themselves — we’re here for you every step of the way.
If you want to learn more about how we approach safety and privacy here at Discord, we have plenty of more resources and articles throughout our Safety Center.
To further safeguard our users, the Safety Reporting Network allows us to collaborate with various organizations around the world to identify and report violations of our Community Guidelines. This program helps our team apply a more global perspective to our enforcement activity, providing context for important cultural nuances that allows us to quickly and effectively apply our policies to content and activity across our service.
Members of Discord’s Safety Reporting Network have access to a prioritized reporting channel, and, once our Safety team is made aware of a policy violation, we may take a range of actions, including: removing content, banning users, shutting down servers, and when appropriate, engaging with the proper authorities.
Our Safety Reporting Network is just one component of our overall commitment to safety. We continually invest in technological advancements, like our recently launched Teen Safety Assist and Family Center tools; regularly update our policies; continually invest in building our team; and more. As we continue to improve and evolve our safety efforts, you can visit our Safety Center to learn more about this ongoing work.
We want you to feel equipped with the tools and resources to talk to your teens about online safety and understand what safety settings Discord already offers from trusted child safety partners. Check out our current and updated Safety Center’s Parent & Educator Resources:
We’re also partnering with child and family safety organizations to build more resources and improve our policies for the long-term. One of our close partners, ConnectSafely recently launched their Parent’s Guide to Discord.
Larry Magid, CEO of ConnectSafely states: "Parents are rightfully concerned about any media their kids are using, and the best way to make sure they're using it safely is to understand how it works and what kids can do to maximize their privacy, security, and safety. That's why ConnectSafely collaborated with Discord to offer a guide that walks parents through the basics and helps equip them to talk with their kids about the service and how they can use it safely."
We’re now making it easier for students to find and spend time with their classmates through Student Hubs. Each Hub features student-run communities around their school – after school clubs, study groups, hangouts, classes, and more. Hubs are only accessible to users with an email address associated with that school. Servers within the hub are created by students who determine who has access to their server. Communities held within Student Hubs aren’t officially affiliated with schools themselves, nor are they intended for official school use.
We built Student Hubs with additional safety guidelines around cheating, bullying, or other toxic behaviors to ensure your students have a great, safe experience. For more information you can read through our Student Hubs FAQs for parents and educators.
We have a lot planned this school year to improve on our existing safety policies, settings, and experiences for teens. We will engage more directly with parents, educators, and child safety organizations, and we’re currently hiring for a Teen Safety Policy Manager to lead this charge. We’ll have other product updates and partnership announcements to come!
On October 16th, 2018, we added an arbitration and class action waiver clause. To summarize, this clause states that when there’s a disagreement between Discord and you, we’ll use an alternative dispute resolution process known as arbitration.
The current legal landscape in the United States is such that class action lawsuits can be abused. This clause was added because we are now operating a game store and subscription service for profit. Like many other companies, we are now a target for entities who wish to abuse the class action lawsuit.
If you’d like to learn more about the legal landscape, arbitration, and the potential abuse of class action lawsuits, we’ve included a handful of links in the Resources section at the bottom of this post.
We think that people can disagree on whether or not arbitration is good in general or whether or not the class action system is one that is beneficial; we don’t think it’s completely black and white. In fact, we’re very interested in how Europe is approaching implementing class action lawsuits, as their approach may mitigate the issues that the United States faces with them.
Because we don’t think it’s black and white, one of the things that we’ve implemented (which some of our competitors do not), is to allow you to opt out of this clause completely. We encourage you to opt out if you wish. You won’t be penalized in any way if you do so. At no point will we ever gate any features or take any action on users because they’ve opted out of arbitration.
The following changes will be live sometime before October 20th, 2018.
As we stated above in “Why did we change it,” our motivation for this change is because of the legal climate in the United States. To protect our users outside the United States, we’ve decided to modify this clause so that it only affects users in the United States. If you are outside of the United States, this clause does not apply to you. This means users outside the United States do not need to opt out if they were wanting to.
Furthermore, every user was (or will be if they haven’t logged in yet) notified of changes to our Terms of Service on the date they were updated by a blue notification bar at the top of the Discord client. In hindsight, we should have provided notice of these changes much further in advance, so we apologize for that.
That said, much of the feedback we’ve received is that our community was not aware of these changes. To provide more opportunity for those who wish to opt out and for those who may have overlooked the notification bar, we’ve extended our opt out period from the initial 30 days to 90 days.
Stated in our Terms of Service under DISPUTE RESOLUTION:
You have the right to opt out and not be bound by the provisions requiring arbitration by sending written notice of your decision to opt out to Discord by email to [email protected].
Your opt out doesn’t need any specific template or form. It just needs the request to opt out and it must come from the email associated with your Discord account.
We want to reiterate — you will not be penalized in any way for opting out of arbitration. Again, we encourage you to do so if you wish to.
Thanks again for your feedback — it’s important to us as a company that we hear from our community. We really appreciate that you all care so much to voice your opinions. If you have any further questions, please send an email to [email protected] and we’ll be happy to answer!
To do that, Discord works with organizations like the Digital Wellness Lab at Boston Children’s Hospital and the National PTA to understand the needs of one of our largest user bases.
“We are experts in technology, not experts in teenagers. So we need to make sure we are pulling in expert research when we're thinking about what it means to be a safe, healthy and ultimately, empowering place for young people,” said Liz Hegarty, Discord’s global teen safety policy manager.
Hegarty and her colleagues are guided by the research, which is empathetic to teens' lived experiences and cautions against being overly paternalistic.
For example, Digital Wellness Lab advises parents to resist the urge to step in and solve every problem for their teen, online or off. Instead, they recommend asking probing questions and talking through the decision-making process. This can clear the way to have more conversations about digital boundaries.
“These conversations can help teens build their safety muscle”, said Hegarty.
We built our Family Center with this idea in mind. Launched in 2023, the Family Center is an opt-in tool that enables guardians, trusted adults, and teens to “link” their accounts. While it allows parents to know who their teen is connected with, the tool does not allow the adults to see the contents of their teen’s conversations with friends.
“The key is to find balance between respecting teen autonomy and agency while also giving parents ways to check in with their teens”, said Savannah Badalich, Discord’s senior director of policy.
“Parents and trusted adults in a teen's life are here to coach them,” said Badalich, who leads the team responsible for key safety areas, such as teen safety and mental health. “Let them explore themselves, let them find who they are. But give them parameters in which to do so.”
There is a risk that a teen may choose not to talk at all if they feel they are being constantly monitored. This is why it's important to follow the research.
“Leading experts say that sort of parental surveillance does not always help generate safety or create a trustworthy environment for teens to talk to their caregivers,” Hegarty said.
Hegarty notes that when building the Family Center tool, Discord decided to add an additional layer of support. As a teen connects with their parents, Discord surfaces information for the Crisis Text Line (note that this is for users in the U.S. only). This is a support line that provides free, 24/7 mental health support via text, WhatsApp, and web chat.
The idea is to provide available resources to teens and to encourage them to seek help if they need it. It’s another way we embed subtle lessons throughout the experience.
Discord’s Teen Safety Assist includes two recently released safety features: one for when a teen receives a direct message (DM) from a user for the first time, and another that blurs potentially sensitive content in DMs and group DMs with friends.
When an alert is triggered, the teen might see a pop-up that says, Unwanted message? If you don’t want to chat with this person, you can block or mute them. They can then click to “learn more,” and see a message that prompts “Unwanted message?”, as well as provides a set of tips for handling the situation.
“It's this idea of educating as opposed to just punishing teenagers when they make mistakes,” said Hegarty. “In the moment, it’s important to give teens resources, autonomy, agency, and help.”
Hegarty points to research about how teens are nervous to block other people. They're worried if the person finds out they're blocked, the teen is going to look uncool. Meanwhile, if they report, they aren’t sure what will happen next. They are anxious about getting somebody in trouble.
Research from Thorn, a leading child welfare nonprofit, also suggests that when teens encounter a potentially harmful experience online, they are less likely to seek support offline, such as talking to a trusted adult. So Discord is trying to meet teens where they are.
“It's not a paternalistic approach that protects teens from everything. Being overly restrictive risks them lacking the necessary skills to move within the world once they turn 18,” said Badalich. “Instead, let's educate them throughout their experience. Let's give them tools to control their experience.”
Risk-taking is part of growing up. It’s part of being a teenager.
“Because their brain is still developing, they need options, time and education,” said Badalich, whose team is also working to sharpen Discord’s enforcement system with teens in mind.
When it comes to developing the policies and rules that govern the platform, Badalich and her team are rethinking what that looks like, with the understanding that teens need extra opportunities to learn.
“Keep up, take down, or ban have been the main levers. And we're continuing to explore even more ways to take necessary action,” said Badalich. For example, “When you think about someone talking about self-harm, do we really want to penalize them? Or do we want to figure out some other form of intervention?”
To be clear, when it comes to the most severe violations—such as those involving violent extremism and content that sexualizes children—Discord will continue to have a zero-tolerance policy.
But when it comes to building out more nuanced, research-driven policies, the policy team looks to lessons from restorative justice, a concept that recognizes that people are capable of change.
“Instead of just being purely punitive all of the time,” said Badalich, “Discord wants to move in the direction of where we are giving people opportunities to change, grow, and learn.”
Discord’s ground-up approach to safety starts with our product and features. Not only do we intentionally build products that help to keep our users safer, but we also implement a Safety by Design practice, which includes a risk assessment process during the product development cycle that helps identify and mitigate potential risks to user safety.
This year, we made key investments that help teens, parents, and all of our users have a positive Discord experience:
We believe that everyone in the industry should share solutions, intelligence, and technology, which is why we continued to invest in furthering our partnerships with a number of safety organizations this year. These organizations help us to keep our platform and the internet safer by supplementing our expertise and insights and helping us to continue to advance cutting edge safety efforts.
As part of our extensive fight against child sexual abuse material (CSAM), we continued to deepen our partnership with the Tech Coalition. I joined the Tech Coalition’s Board of Directors and am excited to help shape the organization’s future and continue to collaborate with industry leaders to combat online sexual abuse and exploitation.
One of the most exciting parts of our partnership with the Tech Coalition this year was the launch of Lantern, a first-of-its-kind signal sharing program for companies to enhance and strengthen how we detect attempts to sexually exploit and abuse children and teens online. Discord joined other industry partners like Google, Mega, Meta, Quora, Roblox, Snap, and Twitch to share signals about activity we detect that violates our policies and utilize signals shared by other companies to surface violating activity on their platforms.
We also expanded our partnership with INHOPE, a global network combatting CSAM online. Through this partnership, we are better able to collaborate with the hotlines globally working to address this important issue.
We joined the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), the UK’s frontline defense against the spread of online child sexual abuse imagery. By becoming a member, Discord will be able to deploy IWF’s world-leading services to keep the platform safer, including the IWF’s URL List and Keywords List, as well as its Non-Photographic URL and Hash Lists.
Discord also joined the Christchurch Call, a community of over 120 members worldwide with a shared goal of eliminating violent extremism online. Partnership and transparency are cornerstones of our effort to counter extremism and we are committed to working collectively with this global community to make the internet and the world a safer place.
Discord is partnering with the European Center for Not-for-Profit Law to lead a pilot project to implement their Framework for Meaningful Engagement (FME). ECNL’s expertise and the FME will help us build and deploy AI systems in support of our safety work.
We continued our important partnership with the National PTA around family engagement efforts. Through their Build Up and Belong program, we supported local PTAs as they hosted events to help families build healthy digital habits and foster productive conversations about navigating online interactions.
Additionally, we are proud board members of Digital Trust & Safety Partnership, which gathers tech platforms to collaborate on and publish online safety best practices. This includes conducting audits of our policies and processes to ensure safety is built into our systems by design. We also are active members of the Trust & Safety Professional Association, an organization that gathers Trust & Safety professionals from around the world for training and to share best practices across the industry.
As technologies continue to evolve, so does the dynamic safety landscape, presenting new challenges that no company or government can tackle alone. Continued industry investment in safety features must be made to ensure users on our platforms are safer. We can do this by evolving our features and policies to ensure they are up to date, holistic, and meet the needs of our users; regularly sharing knowledge and progress; and working collaboratively with each other and legislators, advocacy groups, and academics, to ensure a safer online experience for everyone.
While we’ve made a lot of progress over the last year, we know there is still much more we can and must do – on our own and in collaboration with others – to combat known and new threats. The work here never stops. As we look to the New Year, my team and I are as committed as ever to building on the important safety work we’ve done over the past twelve months, and we are confident that Discord will continue to be the best place for people to have fun online.
Protecting the privacy and safety of our users is of utmost importance to Discord.
Discord is a communications service for teens and adults who are looking to talk with their communities and friends online. We do not allow those under the age of 13 on our service, and we encourage our users to report accounts that may belong to underage individuals.
We’re pleased to share that the Better Business Bureau’s Children’s Advertising Review Unit (“CARU”) issued a report endorsing our practices relating to children’s privacy. CARU regularly monitors websites and online services for compliance with laws and best practices relating to children’s privacy and engaged with Discord as part of its routine monitoring work.
CARU finished its review of Discord in October 2020 and issued the following statement in connection with the release of its report:
“[T]he outcome we hope for is proactive corporate accountability on children’s privacy, and that is exactly what Discord delivered.”
— Dona Fraser, Senior Vice President Privacy Initiatives, and Director of the Children’s Advertising Review Unit (CARU).
Discord appreciates CARU's thorough evaluation of our service and our practices. We look forward to continuing our work to improve online privacy and safety.