Hive Moderation is an AI content moderation system. It helps platforms screen text, images, video, audio. It flags harmful content, deepfakes, spam, nudity, hate speech, etc.
It offers you peace of mind so your community stays safe.
It gives you APIs + a no-code moderation dashboard. You set rules, view flagged items, escalate when needed. It’s built for scale and speed.
In user-generated platforms, bad content spreads fast. You can’t rely only on humans. Hive uses machine learning to automate content filtering.
That’s key for trust & safety. It prevents brand risk, protects users, and keeps moderation costs manageable.
Also, because it supports multiple media types, you don’t need separate systems for text vs video vs images. That unified approach is a big plus.
Here are what Hive brings to the table:
They also support a “Moderation Dashboard” so non-tech staff (trust & safety teams) can manage flagged content without code.
Hive uses usage-based pricing. You pay per 1,000 requests or per minute (for audio/video).
For example:
If you have heavy volume, you contact sales and get enterprise pricing.
So your cost scales with traffic. If you moderate 100,000 images, that’s ~$300 (for visual) + extras.
I couldn’t find a reliable “monthly visitors” number for Hive Moderation’s site. The parent Hive AI is fairly established though and works with big platforms. Hive’s brand is recognized.
As for social media followers, I found no consolidated public number for all platforms. They maintain presence on LinkedIn, Twitter, etc. But no confirmed total is published.
One interesting case: Highrise (a large avatar-based social network) used Hive Moderation to scale its content safety. That shows Hive can handle big, real use.
Also, Hive’s moderation API is used by big names like Reddit (for content filtering). Hive’s models have been used in livestreaming contexts too.