A Global Investigation Reveals a Hidden World of Abuse
A recent investigation by CNN exposed something deeply disturbing: a vast online ecosystem where sexual violence is not only normalized but taught.
In this reporting, journalists uncovered online forums, chat groups, and platforms where users:
- Share videos of sexual assault
- Exchange tactics on how to drug or manipulate victims
- Encourage and coach one another on how to commit abuse and avoid detection
This is what many are now calling an “online rape academy.”
And while the phrase is shocking, the reality behind it is even worse.
This Is Not Just “Content” It’s Instruction
What makes this investigation so alarming is not just the existence of violent material but the intentional teaching happening within these spaces. It disgusting and the number of men accessing it, is downright vile.
According to the reporting, users weren’t just consuming abuse they were:
- Providing step-by-step guidance on committing sexual assault
- Discussing how to incapacitate victims
- Sharing methods to evade law enforcement
This is not passive viewing. It is active facilitation of harm.
And in some cases, the abuse being shared involved real victims people who were drugged, unconscious, or otherwise unable to consent.
The Scale and the Misunderstanding
As this story spread, claims circulated online suggesting tens of millions of men were participating in these spaces. That claim is misleading.
What the reporting actually reflects is the scale of traffic or engagement across broader platforms not verified individual perpetrators.
But here’s the truth that matters:
Even if a fraction of users are engaging in or learning from this content, the harm is real, organized, and growing.
The Role of Platforms: When Technology Enables Abuse
This investigation raises serious questions about platform accountability.
Many of these spaces:
- Operate in legal gray areas
- Fail to adequately moderate or remove abusive content
- Allow communities centered on sexual violence to persist
In some cases, platforms have been aware of harmful content and failed to act swiftly or effectively.
This mirrors what we see across many institutional abuse cases:
Warning signs are ignored. Systems fail. Harm continues.
The Impact on Survivors
For survivors, the existence of these networks is retraumatizing.
It reinforces a devastating reality:
- Abuse is being recorded, shared, and monetized
- Communities exist that validate and encourage perpetrators
- Survivors’ lack of consent is not just ignored—but exploited
This is not just a crime against individuals it is a systemic failure that amplifies trauma on a global scale.
Legal Accountability: Where Civil Justice Comes In
Cases like this raise critical legal questions:
- Can platforms be held liable for hosting or failing to remove exploitative content?
- What responsibility do companies have when users are actively coordinating harm?
- How can survivors pursue justice when their abuse is distributed online?
Civil litigation is increasingly becoming a tool to hold not just perpetrators—but the systems that enable them—accountable.
We are already seeing lawsuits targeting:
- Tech platforms for failure to moderate harmful content
- Websites that profit from exploitative material
- Institutions that ignore or conceal abuse
And this space will continue to evolve.
Why This Story Matters
The term “rape academy” is not just a headline.
It is a warning.
Sexual violence now extends beyond physical spaces, as individuals organize, normalize, and teach it online.
And unless there is accountability legal, institutional, and cultural these networks will continue to grow.
Speaking With a Sexual Abuse Lawyer About Your Rights
If you or someone you love has experienced sexual abuse including abuse that was recorded or shared online you are not alone.
Andreozzi + Foote is a civil law firm dedicated to representing survivors of sexual abuse. We understand the complexities of these cases, including those involving digital exploitation and institutional failure.
We offer free, confidential consultations.
You deserve to be heard.
Contact us today:
(866) 858-3790
info@vca.law