The numbers behind the platform.
Every quarter we publish a full breakdown of how Greety moderates, responds, and complies. No marketing spin — just volumes, response times, and outcomes.
Reporting period: Q1 2026 (Jan 1 – Mar 31). Next report: July 15, 2026.
Q1 at a glance.
What gets reported.
Severe categories — NCII, underage suspicion, deepfakes — action at near-100% because the bar for action is lower; we err on the side of removal pending review.
Stolen photos / impersonation
Off-platform pressure
Fake profile / catfish
Harassment / hate speech
Solicitation (off-policy)
Non-consensual intimate imagery
Underage suspicion
Deepfakes / AI likeness
Other AUP violations
Who asked, what we did.
We comply with valid legal requests from the jurisdictions we operate in. We push back on overbroad requests and publish every count below.
Thailand
Singapore
United States
Vietnam
Philippines
Where we did not comply, the request was either overbroad, outside our jurisdiction, lacked the required legal authority, or sought data we don’t collect.
How we count.
Reports are counted at first submission — duplicate reports of the same content by different users are deduplicated to a single count, but each reporter is acknowledged.
“Actioned” means the report resulted in content removal, account suspension, or permanent ban. “Not actioned” means the report was reviewed and the content was determined to be within policy — not that it was ignored.
Median response time is measured from report submission to first human review. The severe-case 38-minute figure covers CSAM, NCII, off-platform pressure on minors, and credible threat reports.
Government request counts include all formal legal process received during the period: subpoenas, court orders, preservation requests, MLAT requests, and emergency disclosure requests. Voluntary law-enforcement liaison conversations are not counted.