The digital frontlines of child protection are complex, constantly shifting, and heavily guarded—as they should be. Social media platforms carry a massive responsibility to police their networks for predatory behavior and illegal content. To do this at scale, they rely heavily on automated algorithms and aggressive safety protocols.
Usually, this is a good thing. We want platforms to err on the side of caution when it comes to the safety of the vulnerable. But recently, we experienced firsthand what happens when those automated safety nets cast a little too wide of a net.
Without warning, our X (formerly Twitter) account was suspended.
For an organization dedicated to finding missing children and providing advocacy for exploited children, suddenly losing access to a primary communication channel is jarring. Information moves at lightning speed in our line of work. A delay in sharing a missing child flyer or an update on an international law enforcement operation can feel agonizing.
After an appeal, the account was restored—though we are currently navigating the standard 48-hour waiting period for full functionality to return.
This brief digital exile highlighted a unique paradox that legitimate child advocates face online. The algorithms designed to flag malicious actors are often triggered by the very terminology we use to fight them. When we discuss the realities of exploitation, share updates on law enforcement stings, or use specific keywords to educate the public, we inadvertently trip the wire.
We become "friendly fire" in the algorithmic war against exploitation.
Is it frustrating? Absolutely. But looking at the bigger picture, it is a side effect of a system that is trying—however imperfectly—to do the right thing. If an overly sensitive algorithm occasionally inconveniences an advocate but successfully blocks a predator, that is a trade-off we can survive.
The heart of Trinity Mount Ministries has never been a single social media account. The true impact
of this work relies entirely on our incredible community of online supporters. You are the ones who share the alerts, read the updates, and keep the awareness alive, even when the algorithms get confused.
We will be back to full digital strength shortly. Until then, the work doesn't stop. The mission remains, the advocacy continues, and our community stands strong—algorithm or no algorithm.
Thank you for continuing to support Trinity Mount Ministries. We truly appreciate it.
Brett Fletcher - Founder of Trinity Mount Ministries





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