Mexico Takes on Digital Violence Against Women Where Screens Have Become Weapons
Mexico has introduced a voluntary agreement with Google, Meta, and TikTok to tackle digital gender violence. This comes in response to millions of women facing cyberharassment, where online abuse affects law, policy, fear, dignity, and daily life.
When the Screen Stops Feeling Like a Window
The Mexican government is taking on a difficult but necessary task. It wants to treat digital violence against girls and women not as a minor issue or background noise, but as a serious public problem at the heart of the country’s values and institutions.
The government, through the Ministry of Women and the Agency for Digital Transformation and Telecommunications, has signed a voluntary agreement with tech companies such as Google, Meta, and TikTok to combat violence on their platforms. In a country where over 10 million women have faced cyberharassment, this issue is huge. It’s not just about activists or isolated incidents. It’s a widespread problem tied to everyday digital life, where being online can also mean being vulnerable.
Claudia Sheinbaum said the aim is to prevent and address cases of gender violence in the digital environment in a timely way through coordinated action and voluntary commitments with the platforms. She underlined that the agreement is not mandatory. That detail matters. It reveals both the ambition and the fragility of the strategy. Mexico wants a permanent line of communication with companies that control the spaces where harm circulates, but for now, it is relying on cooperation rather than coercion.
This tension feels very Mexican and Latin American. The government sees how big the problem is, but has to work with private platforms that hold more power than many public institutions when it comes to controlling speech and visibility. The result is a familiar pattern: governments bring urgency, companies provide the infrastructure, and women bear the consequences.
This agreement seems to recognize that digital violence isn’t just about one viral image or hateful message. It’s part of a bigger system of abuse, humiliation, coercion, and impunity. Online violence is just as real as offline violence. In fact, it can be more lasting, easier to find, repeat, and harder to avoid.

From Awareness to Removal
Citlalli Hernández said the first phase of the agreement focuses on prevention. This means reviewing and improving social network rules, enhancing tools and policies to stop and address online violence, and creating a digital safety guide. The guide aims to promote responsible internet use, prevent abuse, and encourage reporting of crimes.
These measures might seem modest on paper, but they reveal a deeper truth. Mexico is facing a crisis that is as much cultural as it is technical. You can’t fix digital misogyny just by deleting posts after they appear. You also need to change what users accept, what creators promote, and what platforms reward. Education about equality, awareness campaigns, and sharing reliable information aren’t just extras—they’re key to stopping harassment from becoming entertainment, punishment, or sport.
The government has also stressed a zero impunity approach for crimes such as sexual abuse, harassment, and other forms of gender violence that appear online. Sheinbaum said the goal is to address the problem so that platforms, through these protocols, gradually remove images or publications related to violence against women. That sentence gets to the heart of the matter. Visibility is power online. So is deletion. A violent post can wound through exposure. Its removal can become the first act of institutional recognition that harm has actually occurred.
Still, prevention campaigns often lag behind the fast pace of online abuse. This abuse is immediate, personal, and sometimes anonymous. It can spread before institutions even agree on what to call it. That’s why the second phase of the agreement could be even more important.

The Hard Part Is Building Consequences
The second phase focuses on case response. Under the protocol, platforms and government authorities would work together to define what content can be considered criminal or violent, strengthen policies banning abuse or sexual exploitation, create a unified guide for reporting and complaints, improve mechanisms for flagging offending profiles, and connect victims to direct support channels such as 079.
This is where the initiative stops sounding symbolic and starts entering the harder terrain of enforcement. The state is trying to build operational cooperation between security authorities and digital platforms so that investigations do not unfold in separate worlds. That includes immediate removal of non-consensual intimate content or violent material, along with accessible tools to combat harassment and hate speech, especially when women are the target.
That focus is not abstract. Data from MOCIBA 2024 show that 21% of internet users in Mexico aged 12 and older experienced cyberharassment in 2023, affecting around 18.9 million people. The difference by gender exists, though it is not enormous, with 22.2% of women and 19.6% of men reporting digital harassment. That narrow gap is revealing. It suggests a country where online intimidation is broadly spread, but where women still face a sharper edge of it, one tied specifically to sexual violence, humiliation, and gendered control.
The geography in the data also matters. Yucatán, San Luis Potosí, and Hidalgo show the highest incidence, while Baja California, Tamaulipas, and Morelos report the lowest. That unevenness suggests digital violence is national, but not identical everywhere. It interacts with local cultures, reporting patterns, and institutional capacity. In other words, there is no single Mexican internet. There are many Mexicos inside the same network.
This agreement adds to other ongoing efforts. The Ministry of Women is partnering with UN Women to create a roadmap that strengthens the national response to violence against women online, covering prevention to punishment. The government also announced the establishment of the first National Observatory of Digital Violence, which will support victims and survivors and provide data to improve public policies.
All of this shows something bigger than just a new protocol. Mexico is slowly creating a way to talk about rights for harm that was long ignored as private embarrassment or online drama. That matters. In a country where women have often had to fight just to name the violence against them, naming digital violence is already a political act. The next challenge is tougher: turning recognition into real consequences, turning visibility into protection, and finally making the screen a place where women don’t have to suffer in silence.
Also Read: Latin America Sees Mexico’s Cyber Siege Become Everyone’s Everyday Risk




