Requests for content alteration and takedown

1 Requests granted 532 Total requests

Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge.

The Wikimedia projects make up one of the world’s largest repositories of human knowledge. With that much information, someone is bound to get upset by some of the content from time to time. While the vast majority of content disputes are resolved by users themselves, in some extreme cases the Wikimedia Foundation may receive a legal demand to override our users.

The Wikimedia projects are yours, not ours. People just like you from around the world write, upload, edit, and curate all of the content. Therefore, we believe users should decide what belongs on Wikimedia projects whenever legally possible.

Below, you will find more information about the number of requests we receive, where they come from, and how they could impact free knowledge. You can also learn more about how we fight for freedom of speech through our user assistance programs in the FAQ.

This report covers requests we received between July and December, 2025. For historical data, please see our past reports.

Alteration and takedown requests from governments

46 Government requests

Requests for content alteration and takedown

Government requests46
Other486

Government requests breakdown

CountryEntityRequests
BangladeshPoliticians, Candidates, and Political Parties1
FrancePoliticians, Candidates, and Political Parties2
GermanyFederal Agency
Politicians, Candidates, and Political Parties
1
1
HungaryNational Agency1
IndiaCyber Police1
Kingdom of Saudi ArabiaNational Agency1
MexicoPoliticians, Candidates, and Political Parties1
MoroccoPoliticians, Candidates, and Political Parties1
Russian FederationFederal Agency27
Sri LankaPoliticians, Candidates, and Political Parties1
TurkeyPoliticians, Candidates, and Political Parties1
UkraineNational Agency
Politicians, Candidates, and Political Parties
1
3
United States of AmericaAdministrative Agency
Politicians, Candidates, and Political Parties
1
2

Requests for content alteration and takedown by project

Project AffectedRequestsGranted
English Wikipedia1600
Wikimedia Commons970
German Wikipedia390
Multiple Projects381
French Wikipedia250
Russian Wikipedia200
Wikidata150
Italian Wikipedia140
Not a Wikimedia Project130
Spanish Wikipedia120
Dutch Wikipedia80
Japanese Wikipedia70
Polish Wikipedia70
Romanian Wikipedia50
Russian Wikinews50
Turkish Wikipedia50
Ukrainian Wikipedia50
Hungarian Wikipedia40
Portuguese Wikipedia40
Farsi Wikipedia30
Korean Wikipedia30
Arabic Wikipedia20
Bahasa Wikipedia20
Catalan Wikipedia20
Chinese Wikipedia20
Czech Wikipedia20
Finnish Wikipedia20
German Wiktionary20
Malay Wikipedia20
Norwegian Wikipedia20
Serbian Wikipedia20
Albanian Wikipedia10
Bengali Wikipedia10
Croatian Wikipedia10
Danish Wikipedia10
Danish Wikisource10
English Wikiversity10
English Wiktionary10
Estonian Wikipedia10
French Wiktionary10
Galician Wikipedia10
Greek Wikipedia10
Hebrew Wikipedia10
Hindi Wikipedia10
Italian Wikivoyage10
Latvian Wikipedia10
Lithuanian Wikipedia10
Russian Wikisource10
Slovenian Wikipedia10
Swedish Wikipedia10
Unknown40

Requests for content alteration and takedown by country

Country of OriginRequestsGranted
United States of America580
Germany510
Russian Federation290
France280
United Kingdom260
Italy180
Spain170
India130
Japan80
Netherlands80
Hungary70
Romania70
Ireland60
Poland60
Canada50
Ukraine50
Australia40
Austria40
Croatia40
Norway40
The Republic of South Korea40
Turkey40
Finland30
Morocco30
Serbia30
Sweden30
Switzerland30
Taiwan30
Argentina20
Bangladesh20
Belgium20
Czech Republic20
Denmark20
Iran20
Israel20
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia20
Malaysia20
Mexico20
Pakistan20
Brazil10
China10
Estonia10
Greece10
Indonesia10
Latvia10
Luxembourg10
New Zealand10
Philippines10
Portugal11
Slovenia10
South Africa10
Sri Lanka10
Uganda10
Vietnam10
Venezuela10
Unknown1600

Child Safety Reports

26 CyberTipline Reports Submitted 55 Subsequent Content Actions 22 Subsequent Account Actions

The global community of volunteer contributors to the Wikimedia projects, along with the Wikimedia Foundation, have developed and tailored practices to address potentially illegal content on Wikipedia and other Wikimedia projects.

Robust community-led content moderation processes provide the first line of defense. While automated tools are used to support existing community processes, the bulk of this work is done manually across Wikimedia projects.

Situations involving actual or suspected Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) are escalated to the Foundation’s Trust & Safety team. This team utilizes PhotoDNA, an automated tool, to identify known CSAM images and videos, and report them to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), a nonprofit that refers cases to law enforcement agencies around the world. 

While CSAM has been found on Wikimedia projects, it is very rare. When actual or suspected CSAM is identified, we immediately lock the account(s) that upload the content and escalate the information to NCMEC’s CyberTipline, as required by law. Each report to NCMEC may involve one or more pieces of content. For our annual CyberTipline report totals from previous years, please see: 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021, and 2020.

Right to Erasure

0 Requests granted 17 Total requests

The Right to Erasure, or Right to be Forgotten, is a right under the laws of various countries that allows individuals to request that certain information relating to them be delisted or removed.

When we receive a Right to Erasure request regarding project content, we first direct the requester to experienced project volunteers, who routinely handle most requests to change content on the projects. Wikimedia projects have guidelines for content about living persons, and the volunteer community can review the guidelines and work with the requester to address their concerns.

When we receive a request relating to a user account, we provide the user information on the community-driven vanishing process. See the account-related requests section below for more detail on these requests.

We believe in a Right to Remember. Everyone should have free access to relevant and neutral information of public concern; delisting and removing such content from the internet harms our collective ability to remember history and understand the world. In October 2016, we filed a petition to intervene in Google’s appeal of a French administrative order that would expand such delistings from the European Union to all global domains. In March 2020, following a ruling by the European Court of Justice limiting the geographic scope of such removals, the French court quashed the order, and the French agency behind it has adjusted its position.

* Please note that this information only reflects requests made directly to us. Wikimedia project pages continue to disappear from search engine results without any notice or request to us. We have a dedicated page where we post notices of delisted project pages that we have received from the search engines who provide such information as part of their own commitments to transparency.

Account related requests

982 Account deletion requests 23 Unblock requests

Many of the requests we receive ask for changes to project content, or request that we provide data about our users. However, some requests pertain to user accounts.

Account deletion

When we receive a request to delete a user’s account, we provide the user information on the community-driven vanishing process. Prior to July 2019, account deletion requests were reported in the “Right to Erasure” section. We are now reporting these requests separately in order to give users additional clarity on the types of requests we receive.

Unblock Requests

On occasion, a user who has been blocked by the community may contact the Foundation to request that we take action to reverse the block. The Foundation supports the community’s ability to issue blocks in order to protect users and the projects, and appeals to us when a user has been blocked for disruptive behavior will not result in reinstatement.