Is your brand truly protected? Content moderation as a strategic pillar in 2026

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In an environment where every review, comment, or image can influence the purchasing decision of thousands of people, content moderation has moved from being a secondary task to a critical operational function. We are no longer just talking about removing offensive comments: today, moderating means protecting your reputation, ensuring regulatory compliance, and sustaining customer trust.

According to the Safety in Numbers report by TELUS Digital, 58% of companies consider content moderation a higher priority than a year ago. At the same time, e-commerce in Spain reached €28.346 billion in the second quarter of 2025, with more than 493 million transactions. More digital volume implies more user-generated content and more risk surface.

This article will help you understand what content moderation entails in 2026, how a professional model works, what metrics you should be measuring, and why outsourcing this function could be one of the most strategic decisions for your operation this year.

What is content moderation really in business environments?

Content moderation is the set of processes—human, automated, or hybrid—that allow for detecting, classifying, and acting upon content that violates legal regulations, commercial policies, or a brand’s quality standards.

In retail and eCommerce environments, this function covers much more than filtering inappropriate comments. It includes reviewing reviews, Q&As on product pages, customer-uploaded images, seller listings, descriptions with misleading claims, and AI-generated content. The TELUS Digital report indicates that 20% of surveyed leaders identify UGC management as one of their primary challenges for safe digital environments.

The difference between community management and risk-based moderation is substantial. While the former seeks to encourage interaction, the latter operates as a control system that prioritizes content based on its potential impact on the brand, regulatory compliance, and consumer experience.

What can happen if you don’t moderate correctly?

Failing to manage content moderation has direct consequences on conversion, reputation, and regulatory compliance.

Trustpilot revealed in its Trust Report 2025 that it removed 4.5 million fake reviews in 2024 (7.4% of the total submitted), with 90% detected automatically through machine learning and GenAI. If a specialized platform needs to remove millions of fake reviews per year, the impact on an eCommerce without robust moderation processes can be severe.

In Spain, the Ministry of Consumer Affairs proposed banning fake reviews, enabling businesses to request the removal of unverifiable reviews. The Microsoft global survey adds another layer: 64% believe companies do not remove enough harmful content, yet 32% feel moderation has gone too far. The real challenge is not to remove more, but to remove better: with precision, transparency, and appeal processes.

How does a professional moderation model work today?

The standard for 2025-2026 is the hybrid model: automation for detection and triage, combined with human review for cases requiring context and proportionality.

According to TELUS Digital, 44% operate with a hybrid model and an additional 21% maintain a human-led approach. The Avasant analysis on Content Trust and Safety 2025-2026 describes the evolution toward risk-based workflows, with automation reaching ranges of 93% to 99% in consistency, but with human expertise concentrated on edge cases and high-impact decisions.

In practice, this works in tiers. Low-risk content can be automatically approved. Borderline cases move to a first-line human team. And high-impact content (reputational incidents, fraud, legal claims) scales to specialists with specific content moderation protocols.

What metrics should an Operations or CX Director measure?

Connecting content moderation with business results requires clear metrics: TAT (average time to decision), backlog, accuracy (false positives and negatives), appeal and reversal rate, consistency across markets, and cost per moderated item.

The Trustpilot DSA report offers a revealing benchmark: 251,822 notices for inauthentic reviews from EU users, 20,705 appeals, and a median of 189 hours per resolution. PwC details that under the DSA, platforms issued more than 20 billion statements of reasons in their first year of enforcement. If your content moderation operation does not measure these indicators, it is likely operating without the visibility needed to make informed decisions. Moderation is a transactional system that must be managed with the same rigor as any other critical operation.

How to prepare for AI-generated content and deepfakes?

Synthetic content represents a growing challenge. The Microsoft survey shows that confidence in detecting deepfakes dropped from 46% to 25%, with an actual success rate of just 44% in authenticity tests.

In Spain, the IAB Spain 2025 Annual Social Media Study indicates that 7 out of 10 users believe it is necessary to label AI-generated content. The AI Act will apply transparency rules from August 2026, and Forrester anticipates a 40% growth in deepfake detection spending. Integrating these capabilities into your content moderation operation is no longer optional.

What do the cases of Amazon and AliExpress teach us?

Amazon committed to the British regulator to strengthen the fight against fake reviews, pursuing “catalog abuse” and taking legal action against review brokers. Review integrity is now a front for both legal risk and conversion simultaneously.

The European Commission made AliExpress’s commitments under the DSA binding after detecting that the platform did not act sufficiently against illegal products. For retailers, the lesson is direct: content moderation includes control over listings, sellers, and scalable regulatory compliance.

When does it make sense to outsource content moderation?

Outsourcing makes sense when the operation faces accelerated growth, a lack of 24/7 coverage, multilingual needs, regulatory pressure, or seasonal peaks. Even the Trustpilot report acknowledges that it outsources moderation tasks to maintain flexibility in the face of variable volumes.

When choosing a partner, evaluate: SLAs differentiated by queue type, independent QA, escalation playbooks, and management of the moderator team’s well-being. Avasant describes exposure to toxic content as a “structural well-being crisis,” which makes labor due diligence a requirement for vendor management.

At Xtendo Global, we offer specialized digital content moderation services that combine technology, trained human teams, and scalable omnichannel operations. With more than 22 years of experience and a presence in 9 countries, our model integrates content moderation with inbound care, post-sales management, and 24/7 coverage, adjusting capacity to seasonal peaks without compromising quality or response times.

Protect your brand with a professional moderation strategy

Content moderation is now a pillar of operational continuity, regulatory compliance, and customer experience. With 48% of companies planning to increase their investment in this area, having a solid strategy marks the difference between protecting your reputation or exposing it.

The key points are clear: broaden the scope of what is moderated (reviews, listings, images, synthetic content), adopt a hybrid model that combines technology with human judgment, measure with business-connected indicators, and evaluate outsourcing as a tool for specialization and operational elasticity.

If you are looking for a partner who understands the complexity of moderation in retail and eCommerce, at Xtendo Global we are prepared to design an operation that protects your brand, complies with regulations, and scales with your business. Let’s talk.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is content moderation mandatory under the DSA for all companies? The DSA establishes differentiated obligations based on platform type and size. Very large ones have stricter requirements, but all intermediary platforms must have reporting, transparency, and appeal mechanisms. Even if your company is not a VLOP, the DSA’s spillover effect raises the expectations of the European market as a whole.

Can 100% of moderation be automated? It is not recommended. Automation is effective for triage and detection, but cases with context or cultural nuance need human review. The hybrid model is the most widely adopted and the one that best balances efficiency and accuracy.

How does content moderation impact conversion? Reviews and comments influence the purchasing decisions of 40% of consumers in Spain. Correct moderation protects the integrity of the information that guides the buyer, reducing returns due to wrong expectations and preventing fraudulent reviews from stalling legitimate sales.

How long should it take to resolve a reported review? It depends on the type of content and the review queue. The Trustpilot benchmark sets a median of 189 hours for appeals. The important thing is to define SLAs by risk level: high-impact content should be resolved within hours, while low-risk cases can follow automated flows. Can moderation become a competitive advantage? Without a doubt. A brand with trusted digital spaces and verified reviews generates greater trust and loyalty. In a market that demands integrity, moderating well is differentiation.

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