A Commitment That Began in 2000, and Geebo Never Wavered
By Greg Collier
When Geebo was founded in 2000, the internet was still the digital Wild West. Classified advertising was rapidly migrating online, and most platforms were racing to grow traffic as quickly as possible. Automation was attractive. Scale was king. Oversight was often an afterthought.
From day one, we chose a different path.
Manual screening of direct-posted listings was not something we added later in response to controversy. It was a foundational decision. Before an ad goes live on Geebo, it is reviewed. That principle was built into the company at its inception because we understood something many others overlooked: an open marketplace without guardrails can quickly become a magnet for exploitation.
In the early 2000s, this approach was neither fashionable nor profitable. Screening ads manually costs money. It slows growth. It limits scale. But we believed then, as we do now, that protecting users must come before maximizing traffic.
Standing Apart During the Craigslist and Backpage Era
As online classifieds exploded in popularity, some platforms embraced categories that generated enormous traffic and revenue but carried clear risk. Adult services listings, loosely moderated personals, and other high-exposure categories became major drivers of engagement.
Geebo refused to follow that path.
When concerns mounted nationwide about prostitution, trafficking, and criminal misuse on classified platforms, we publicly challenged the prevailing industry model. We criticized the reliance on post-publication flagging systems that left harmful content live until someone reported it. We argued that screening content before it appears is a more responsible approach.
Our position was not subtle. We spoke publicly. We urged competitors to remove high-risk categories. We called for stronger self-regulation across the industry.
It would have been easy to quietly mirror what others were doing. It would have been profitable. Instead, we walked away from categories that could have generated tens of millions of dollars in revenue because we believed the risks were too great. We permanently discontinued personals listings. We refused to host adult content. We accepted the financial cost of doing what we believed was right.
That decision defined us.
Endorsed by Those on the Front Lines
Over the years, numerous anti-human trafficking and child protection organizations have publicly acknowledged Geebo’s commitment to responsible practices.
Organizations such as the Bridge to Freedom Foundation, End Slavery Now, Polaris Project, FAIR Girls, ECPAT-USA, Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, and others have commended our refusal to profit from categories linked to exploitation. These endorsements were not sought as marketing tools; they were the result of consistent policy choices.
Their recognition reinforced something we have believed since 2000. Businesses can succeed without compromising human dignity.
Beyond Adult Content: Clear Boundaries
Our commitment to safety extends beyond adult-oriented advertising.
We do not allow hate speech because online platforms should not be vehicles for harassment or extremism.
We do not permit gun sales because of the well-documented risks associated with unregulated firearm transactions.
We do not allow narcotics listings because facilitating illegal drug distribution harms individuals and communities.
We do not host pet sales because of the exploitation and abuse concerns that accompany unregulated animal transactions.
Each of these policies reflects the same core principle that guided us in 2000. Some revenue streams are not worth the risk they introduce.
Core Values That Have Not Changed
Technology has evolved dramatically since Geebo launched. Algorithms have grown more sophisticated. Automation has become dominant. Scale has become easier to achieve than ever before.
Our core values have not changed.
We still review direct-posted listings before they go live.
We still prioritize safety over speed.
We still believe platforms have a responsibility to protect users rather than simply provide a digital venue and look away.
For more than two decades, Geebo has chosen the harder path. A path that requires vigilance, human oversight, and occasionally walking away from profit.
The internet may no longer be the Wild West, but the responsibility of those who operate online platforms remains the same. From 2000 to today, our commitment to safety and social responsibility has been constant.
And it will remain so.
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