Child Safety Standards

Our standards against child sexual abuse and exploitation (CSAE)

Last updated: June 25, 2026

Our commitment

Peeps is a social app where friends share daily photos, chat, and play together. We have a zero-tolerance policy toward child sexual abuse and exploitation (CSAE) and child sexual abuse material (CSAM). This content, and any behavior that sexualizes, endangers, or exploits a minor, is strictly prohibited on Peeps.

Peeps is intended for users aged 13 and older. We do not knowingly allow children under 13 to use the app, and we do not knowingly collect personal information from them.

What is prohibited
  • Creating, uploading, sharing, requesting, or linking to CSAM or any sexualized content involving minors.
  • Grooming, sextortion, trafficking, or any attempt to sexually exploit or endanger a child.
  • Inappropriate or predatory contact directed at a minor.
  • Promoting, normalizing, or facilitating any of the above.
How we prevent and respond to CSAE
  • In-app reporting. Every user can report objectionable chat messages and shared photos directly inside Peeps, choosing a reason such as harassment, hate speech, violent content, or inappropriate content.
  • Blocking. Users can block other users to immediately stop unwanted contact.
  • Review and removal. Reported content is reviewed, and content that violates these standards is removed. Accounts involved in CSAE are terminated.
  • Escalation. We act on credible reports of CSAE and preserve relevant information to support investigations.
Legal compliance

Peeps complies with all applicable child safety laws. We report apparent child sexual abuse material to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) and/or the appropriate local and national authorities in the jurisdictions where we operate, as required by law.

Report a concern or contact us

To report a child safety concern that you cannot resolve through in-app reporting, or to reach our designated point of contact for child safety, email [email protected]. We review these reports promptly.

If you believe a child is in immediate danger, contact your local law enforcement right away.