Supported editions for this feature: Enterprise Plus; Education Standard and Education Plus. Compare your edition
With content reporting for Google Chat, users in your organization can report messages that violate your organizationâs guidelines. Once a report is made, super admins and admins with the moderator role can take action on the report in the Workspace Moderation Tool. Reports can only be viewed by your organizationâs admins, not Google.
Reports in the Moderation Tool appear under the Chat tab. You can learn more about the content of Moderation Tool reports in Find reports in the Moderation Tool.
Users cannot report
- Messages if Chat history is off
- 1:1 direct messages with external users
- Group conversations and spaces owned by external users
Note: Group conversations with external users made before December 2020 can't be reported on due to changes made to Google Chat group conversations and classic Hangouts. For more information read this blog post.
Moderation Tool roles
- AdministratorâA Google administrator with access to the admin control panel, who can turn on content reporting, manage report categories and conversation types, moderate reported messages, and give other users the ability to moderate reported content.
- ModeratorâA moderator has access to the admin control panel, and can moderate reported messages. This is different from a space manager, who can moderate content in a space, but may not have the Moderate Chat content report privilege.
1. Set up content reporting
Before you begin: If you need to set up a department or team for this setting, go to Add an organizational unit.
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Sign in to your Google Admin console.
Sign in using your administrator account (does not end in @gmail.com).
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In the Admin console, go to Menu AppsGoogle WorkspaceGoogle Chat.
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Click Content reporting.
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(Optional) To apply the setting to a department or team, at the side, select an organizational unit. Show me how
- Click Content reporting.
- Check the Allow users to report content in Chat box.
- For Conversation types, check the boxes next to the conversation types that you want users to make reports on.
- For Reporting categories, check the boxes next to the categories that you want to let users choose.
- (Optional) To customize the form, check the Customize title and description box and enter a title and description. Click Insert link to include a file with the description, such as your organizationâs code of conduct. If you donât customize, users get a default title and description.
- Click Save. Or, you might click Override for an organizational unit.
To later restore the inherited value, click Inherit.
Once content reporting is complete, you should create moderators who can take action on reports.
2. (Optional) Create a Moderation Tool moderator role
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Sign in to your Google Admin console.
Sign in using your administrator account (does not end in @gmail.com).
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In the Admin console, go to Menu AccountAdmin roles.
- Click Create new role.
- Enter a name, we suggest, âChat Moderation Roleâ. You can optionally include a description for the role. When youâre done, click Continue.
- In the Google Chat section check Moderate Chat content report.
- (Optional) Select any other privileges you want your Moderation Tool moderators to have. A full list of privileges can be found at Administrator privilege definitions.
- Click Continue.
- Review the privileges and click Create Role.
You can then assign this role to users who will be able to take action on reports made in the Moderation Tool. To learn more, read Assign specific admin roles.
If you use the Security Investigation Tool, or want to set up a team of auditors to monitor reporting activity or other security events in your organization, we recommend you create an auditor role.