Support Beyond Stigma - Where Loved Ones Find Understanding
Why Private Browsing Matters While Seeking Resources in
Relation to CSAM Support
For many families navigating a CSAM accusation, even searching for help can feel frightening. Loved ones often worry that looking up resources, legal information, or emotional support might be misinterpreted, logged, or traced. This fear is understandable, people in this situation are already under immense stress, often feeling scrutinized, isolated, and unsure where it’s safe to turn.
That’s exactly why learning a few simple privacy practices can make a meaningful difference. Tools like VPNs, Incognito/Private Mode, and clearing your browser cache don’t require technical expertise, but they do give you more control over your digital footprint. A VPN masks your location, private browsing prevents your device from saving history, and clearing your cache removes stored data that could otherwise linger. Together, these steps help ensure that your search for support remains confidential. Review an article on online privacy safety tips here.
These privacy tips are meant to help you feel safer when searching for information and support, not to hide or mask inappropriate or illegal activity. Any unlawful online behavior is always discoverable through forensic tools and legal processes.
When your family is thrust into this crisis, one of the hardest truths you discover is how few places exist for people like you to turn. There are support groups for many kinds of trauma and loss, but very few that understand the specific isolation, stigma, and legal complexity that arise when a loved one is accused or convicted of a CSAM‑related offense. This site was created to fill that gap — not to spotlight one person’s story, but to build a practical, confidential resource where you can find clear information, peer connection, and realistic help.
Who This Space Serves
This site is for parents, partners, siblings, friends, and others who are navigating the upheaval that follows an accusation or conviction. It recognizes two hard realities at once, the profound harm done to victims and the intense secondary trauma experienced by families. The goal is to support you as you manage legal steps, protect children, find housing and work, and care for your own mental health - all while facing stigma and scarce peer support.
The Problem with Little Support
You may already feel how the lack of specialized support makes everything harder. Mainstream networks often don’t know how to respond, and many existing groups avoid the topic entirely. That silence leaves people isolated, increases shame, and delays getting the help they urgently need. This site exists to break that silence — offering a safe, moderated space where you can connect with others who truly understand the unique challenges you’re facing.
New to the site? Visit our News section to learn about recent developments and contribution articles to the site.
What the Site Offers
Here you’ll find practical guidance for every stage of this crisis, from the courtroom to prison, reentry, housing, employment, and registry requirements. If you’d like to connect with others who understand what you’re going through, please subscribe to the community forum. Our goal is to offer a moderated, anonymous space where people can share experiences without fear of exposure.
All of the resources on this site are organized to help you take immediate, concrete steps while also supporting the emotional work of coping with shock, stigma, and loss.
If you are looking for additional resources, you might find helpful insights on the following pages located in our Learning Center:
Safety, Privacy, Trust
Because doxxing is a real risk for contributors and families, articles and personal stories in the Resources and News sections are attributed to the SBS site or to verified news outlets rather than to individual authors. Only licensed professionals are identified by name when contributing expert content or commentary.
If you need to reach a moderator, confidential contact options are available on the Contact Us page.
If you’re here because you need help, this site is meant to be a starting point — a place to gather information, connect with others, and take small, steady steps forward. You don’t have to carry this alone. Explore the resources, join a moderated group when it becomes available, or reach out through the secure contact form. The scarcity of support is real, but together we can build a quieter, safer network of practical help.
While none of us wished for these circumstances, many are walking this path alongside you. Together, we will face the storms ahead and hold steady until the light begins to break through.
Security and privacy are extremely important to SBS. View our privacy policies, community guidelines and terms of service here.
“No one escapes pain, fear, and suffering. Yet from pain can come wisdom, from fear can come courage, from suffering can come strength—if we have the virtue of resilience.”