From Haley McNamara, NCOSE <[email protected]>
Subject 🎙️First Podcast of 2026: Listen Now!
Date January 10, 2026 1:10 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Ending Sexploitation Podcast:

Looking Back at 2025 in the Movement to End Sexual Exploitation

Join Haley and Dani this week as they discuss some of our most historic victories of 2025. From a win on age verification at the Supreme Court to the passage of the TAKE IT DOWN Act to a successful campaign to release of the Epstein files. All of these victories, and more, are thanks to steadfast supporters, like you. Listen now to reflect back on the best wins of 2025!

🎧 This week's episode of the Ending Sexploitation Podcast is available on

Spotify

,

Apple Podcasts

, or

Youtube.

Listen now!

NCOSE Urges DOJ and FTC to Investigate X for AI Sexual Exploitation

The National Center on Sexual Exploitation is calling on the Department of Justice (DOJ) and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to investigate X after its

Grok AI chatbot reportedly created child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and has been allowing users to create nonconsensual intimate images (NCII) of women

that have been widely shared on the platform.

“As other countries are now doing, U.S. authorities must investigate X. U.S. federal laws prohibit the creation and distribution of child sexual abuse material, even virtually created CSAM in certain circumstances, such as when it depicts an identifiable child, or depicts a child engaged in sexually explicit conduct. X may also have violated the Take It Down Act for failing to remove and/or continuing to generate non-consensual intimate images of people without their consent. We urge the DOJ and FTC to investigate child exploitation crimes and violations of the Take It Down Act,” said Dani Pinter, Chief Legal Officer and Director of the Law Center for the National Center on Sexual Exploitation.

🗣️

Read our full press statement here.

📣

ACTION: 

Urge the DOJ and FTC to Investigate Grok for Violating CSAM & IBSA Laws

Fox News:

California mom says ChatGPT coached teen son on drug use before his fatal overdose: report



California teenager

 used a chatbot over several months for drug-use guidance on ChatGPT, his mother said. 

She said her son, Sam Nelson, 18, was preparing for college when he asked an AI chatbot how many grams of kratom, a plant-based painkiller commonly sold at smoke shops and gas stations across the country, he would need to get a strong high.

The chatbot told Nelson that it could not provide guidance on substance use and directed Nelson to seek help from a health care professional.

"Hopefully I don’t overdose then," the teen responded before ending the chat. 

Over several months, however, he regularly used OpenAI's ChatGPT for help with his schoolwork, as well as questions about drugs.

Nelson's mother said ChatGPT began coaching her son on how to take drugs and to manage the effects, eventually leading to his death from overdosing at 19 years old. 

🤖

Read the full story to hear how AI chatbots are harming vulnerable users, especially teenagers.

📣 ACTION:

Urge Congress to Support the AI LEAD and AI GUARD Acts!

Study on What Pornography Users Pay Attention to Provides Evidence for Addiction 

It was once believed that only substances like alcohol, cocaine, and nicotine could develop into genuine addictions. But what about certain behaviors like gambling and viewing pornography?  

According to a growing number of addiction experts, both substances 

and behaviors

 can be addictive. Sure, toxic substances may have additional negative effects on the body that behaviors do not, but 

addiction is about out of control

behavior

, not 

damage to the body



It is well documented in the addiction field that if you show an addict something related to their addiction (what scientists call a 

“cue”

) they would pay more attention to the cue than a non-addict. This makes sense, as addicts tend to think about and pursue their addiction so often that they eventually neglect responsibilities and lose interest in other things essential for health and wellbeing. 

Put simply, an addict’s brain “values” their addiction over everything else in life, so they give it more attention. 

Researchers at 

Cambridge University investigated

whether or not individuals with compulsive sexual behavior (compulsive pornography use) would pay greater attention to sexually explicit cues 

compared to healthy controls, similar to how drug addicts pay greater attention to cues associated with their addiction.  

🧠

Read the full blog to learn how pornography addiction affects a user's ability to pay attention.

📣 

ACTION: 

Ask Your State Legislators to Require User Age Verification for Pornography!

Sincerely, 

-----------------------------------------------------------
Email Marketing By CharityEngine ([link removed])
To be removed from this list, copy the following address into your web browser [link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: n/a
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: n/a
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a