Drawing the Line Coalition Resources

Drawing the Line Coalition Resources

This page collects publications, resources, and links from Drawing the Line coalition partners and media outlets. Publications and resources appearing here are curated by the Advisory Board of the Drawing the Line project, on the basis of their broad alignment with the Drawing the Line Principles. However, no endorsement by signatories of the Drawing the Line Principles is implied by the inclusion of a publication or resource on this page. To suggest additions to this page, contact us.

Publications & Resources

Drawing the Line Watchlist 2025

A legal review addressing the misuse of online safety discourse to criminalize non-harmful, fictional sexual expression and conflate it with real child sexual abuse material (CSAM). The Watchlist provides a comparative analysis across ten countries along with best practice recommendations.

Drawing the Line Watchlist 2025 Launch

This webinar held on 10 December 2025 was for the the global launch of the Drawing the Line Watchlist. Joined by three members of the project’s Advisory Board—Emma Shapiro, Ashley Remminga, and Zora Rush—it explores how censorship, moral panic, and poorly drafted laws are reshaping the digital landscape for artists, queer communities, and marginalized creators.

Drawing the Line Background Paper

This background paper accompanies the release of the Drawing the Line Principles, a set of guiding principles for an ongoing program of research and advocacy work intended to clearly delineate the boundary between personal expression and lived abuse in the context of digital content regulation and moderation.

Drawing the Line Infographics

A selection of infographics that dynamically illustrate the findings of our Drawing the Line Watchlist.

U.S. v Anderegg Amicus Brief

This brief in the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals responds to a government argument that it is constitutional to criminalize a person over expressive materials that they possess or create privately in their own home, simply by labelling them as obscene. The brief argues that this would be an impermissible intrusion into constitutionally protected privacy rights.

External Links and Media Mentions

Drawing the line: When child safety laws lose sight of real children

Dec 15, 2025, Internet Policy Review — Newly released data reveal how a no-compromise approach to AI-generated and other fictional sexual content depicting children has diverted resources away from prosecuting real child sexual abuse material (CSAM).

We can’t eliminate child abuse by eliminating privacy

Oct 13, 2025, The Guardian — Banning anonymity tools like Tor won’t stop crime. It will only drive people underground and normalize government control over the internet.

Fiction or Felony? The Blurring of Art and Abuse

June 12, 2025, COSL — An AI porn artist was sentenced today in the culmination of a major law enforcement operation. Here’s why experts are concerned.

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