What Are Banned AI Cartoons?

Banned AI cartoons are cartoons that an AI model refuses to generate because they violate the private moderation rules of the platform or company that operates the AI system.
These refusals are not based on Dutch or EU law, but on corporate policies created by U.S.-based Big Tech companies such as Microsoft, Google, and OpenAI.

In other words:

A cartoon is “banned” only because the AI model blocks it — not because it is illegal in the Netherlands or the EU.

AI platforms apply internal banned content policies, NSFW filters and automated moderation models that flag and blog certain topics as unsafe or “sensitive,” even when those topics are fully legal to create, publish, and share under National US, Dutch and EU law.

Typical reasons AI systems block a cartoon:

  • Facial recognition of restricted political figures
  • Nudity or semi-nudity (even artistic, non-erotic, symbolic)
  • Satire involving certain individuals, companies, or institutions
  • “Sensitive political content”
  • Scenes critical of Big Tech companies
  • Depictions related to war, violence, corruption, etc., even in editorial or journalistic context

These blocks reflect U.S. corporate cultural norms, not European legal norms.

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