Roblox said it encourages users to report abuse through official channels.
Roblox is under fire after banning users who were acting as vigilantes against alleged predators on the platform. X blew up with many saying the company is protecting abusers rather than children.
In a company post, Roblox explained the decision, noting that the vigilantes’ behavior violated its Terms of Use. “While seemingly well-intentioned, the vigilantes we’ve banned have taken actions that are both unacceptable and create an unsafe environment for users,” the company said. “Similar to actual predators, they often impersonated minors, actively approached other users, then tried to lead them to other platforms to have sexually explicit conversations.”
Roblox said it encourages users to report abuse through official channels, which are designed to capture metadata and details not available through screenshots or emails. “Accurate, timely reporting from our community is important. Reporting through the appropriate channels, including our custom-designed reporting tools, immediately and with as much specific information as possible is the best way to help us remove bad actors from Roblox,” the company stated.
The company emphasized its scale and safety efforts: 111.8 million daily active users send 6.1 billion chat messages and engage in 1.1 million hours of voice chat across 28 languages. Roblox receives more than 1 billion reports annually, including complaints about spam, cheating, and violations of its policies. In 2024, the company submitted 24,522 reports to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), representing 0.12% of industry-wide submissions, the company said.
The backlash was immediate. One X user wrote, “Roblox's moderation system has a known history of being ineffective, hence the existence of vigilante groups.” Another, @InternetH0F, tweeted, “You decided to ban the guy removing pedophiles off your app instead of the actual pedophiles because they made you more money, boost your numbers, and keep your stockholders happy.” Comedian Ricky Burwick added, “These users impersonated children to catch predators. It’s called a sting operation. The kind police run to catch predators.”
The controversy followed a separate report from Hindenburg Research that caused Roblox’s stock to drop more than 10 percent. The report called Roblox an “X-rated pedophile hellscape” exposing children to grooming, pornography, violent content, and abusive speech. It also accused the platform of inflating user metrics and reducing trust-and-safety spending to pursue profitability, including a 2 percent year-over-year decline in 2024.
Hindenburg highlighted a 2018 case in which a 29-year-old man was caught by police with over 175 hours of footage grooming 150 minors, mostly via Roblox. The report criticized Roblox’s account screening, noting that test accounts could be created under names like “Jeffrey Epstein” and “JeffEpsteinSupporter.”
“We prioritize trust and safety because it’s core to what we do as a company,” the site said. “Helping keep our users safe is a critical part of our vision of connecting a billion people with optimism and civility and is a strategic imperative for our creator community.”
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