The Philippine Cybercrime Investigation and Coordinating Center (CICC) has given Roblox a 30-day ultimatum to stop what it calls the platform’s use as a “hunting ground” for pedophiles, drug traffickers and other criminal activity, or face coordinated nationwide blocking and app-store geo-fencing that could prevent new downloads. This is not a routine content-moderation request but a multi-layer enforcement threat that targets infrastructure and distribution as well as in-app behavior.
CICC’s ultimatum: scope, allegations and enforcement tools
The CICC’s order demands that Roblox address child sexual exploitation, grooming, drug-related coordination and similar illegal uses within 30 days. The agency has threatened to instruct local internet service providers and telecom companies to block Roblox servers and to work with Google and Apple to geo-fence the app in the Philippines if the company fails to take specified steps.
That enforcement plan goes beyond a simple website takedown: ISP-level blocking can sever access to game servers for existing users, while app-store geo-fencing would stop new installs. The CICC’s approach mirrors actions previously taken against Roblox in countries including Qatar, Iran and Turkey and certain U.S. jurisdictions, underlining that access-layer controls are now part of some regulators’ toolkits rather than just demands for better content moderation.
Senate action: Risa Hontiveros’ proposal for mandatory age checks and safety standards
Senator Risa Hontiveros has filed a Senate resolution calling for mandatory age verification and industry-wide child-safety standards for online gaming platforms. Her draft focuses on online sexual abuse and exploitation of children (OSAEC), grooming and the risk of violent radicalization, and explicitly asks for proportionate, risk-based protections rather than blanket prohibitions.
Hontiveros also ties the proposal to education and mental-health dimensions, urging frameworks for digital literacy and responsible gaming. Her position frames regulation as a legislative step—requiring technical fixes like verifiable age checks and reporting channels—rather than leaving enforcement solely to ad hoc blocking by a cybercrime body.
How ISP blocks and app-store geo-fencing would be executed (and what each step does)
Practically, the CICC’s “disable access nationwide” option has two parts: (1) instructing ISPs/telecoms to block traffic to Roblox’s servers or known IP ranges, which can interrupt play for currently installed copies, and (2) coordinating with Google and Apple to prevent the Roblox app from appearing or downloading inside the Philippine app stores. Both measures can be implemented independently or together depending on regulatory orders and platform cooperation.
| Outcome | Likely enforcement steps | Immediate user impact in the Philippines | Operator action required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full compliance within 30 days | CICC monitors implementations; no blocking | Service remains available; possible new account checks | Deploy verifiable age checks, enhanced reporting, evidence retention |
| Partial fixes or disputed claims | Targeted restrictions, increased oversight, conditional measures | Intermittent access issues; some app-store restrictions possible | Submit remediation plans, agree to third-party audits or timelines |
| No meaningful response | ISP-level server blocks plus app-store geo-fencing with Google/Apple | Existing installs may be cut off; new downloads blocked | Respond to legal orders, negotiate lifting conditions, or face long-term ban |
Near-term decisions for parents, Roblox and Philippine regulators
For Roblox the immediate decision is technical and reputational: implement verifiable age checks, strengthen moderation and reporting workflows, and provide evidence to the CICC within the 30-day window to avoid ISP/ store-level disruption. For the CICC and lawmakers the choice is whether to accept a platform-proposed remediation timeline or to escalate to blocking; Senator Hontiveros’ resolution suggests regulators would prefer codified standards that survive ad hoc removals.
Parents and local operators should treat the deadline as a timing checkpoint: verify what safety features a platform publishes (age verification methods, in-app reporting, human moderation), keep records of in-app incidents, and prepare to transition children away from services that lack transparent protections. The next verified checkpoint to watch is Roblox’s public response and any CICC follow-up statements before the 30-day deadline expires.
Q&A — practical questions answered
Q: When does the 30-day clock start? A: The CICC issued the 30-day ultimatum in its recent notice; watch CICC and Roblox press releases for exact start and end dates tied to that notice.
Q: Will existing Roblox users immediately lose access if blocked? A: ISP server blocking can cut access for installed copies; app-store geo-fencing typically prevents new downloads but may not affect all installed versions immediately.
Q: What signals show meaningful remediation? A: Publicly verifiable age-check tech, enhanced human moderation staffing or independent audit commitments, documented reporting channels to Philippine authorities and a timeline filed with the CICC.


