I'll be really quick.
Not only did they not report it, but there were times when they were forced to report it because of the people who were bringing it to their attention, and on their site, instead of saying that this was taken down by NCMEC, they would put up a notice that said this was disabled because there was a violation of copyright. There's this whole attempt to conceal the fact that this stuff was on their site.
They also would do that when people would call out certain child pornography or assault tapes. They would disable the tape, scrub the page to take out the obvious indications that there was child pornography on there, but leave the link up. The reason they did that.... When they came and testified to you and said, “Why would we do this? It's bad for our business,” that was an outright falsehood.
As I testified before, this is all about search engine optimization. They could disable the video, but they kept all the other content up there such that....
Ms. Mickelwait mentioned a bunch of very well-known examples of this woman who committed suicide. There have been some very high-profile instances where stuff was posted to Pornhub. If you were to put that name and something like “sex tape” into a search engine today, the first search result will be Pornhub, even though the video's not there. When you put that search language into Google or Yahoo, it brings you to Pornhub first. Then, even though the video's not there, Pornhub's algorithm will guide you to other like-type material. That's the point. That's what they were doing.