100 Days of Sex Ed

Jackie Rotman

Founder and CEO, Center for Intimacy Justice

Jackie Rotman (she/her) is an entrepreneur and women’s rights activist. She is on a mission to expand the reach of women’s voices by taking down the barriers of sexist censorship and digital suppression.

Jackie is the Founder and CEO of Center for Intimacy Justice (CIJ), a nonprofit that works to expand equity and wellbeing in people’s intimate lives. She led an investigation that was published in 2022 in The New York Times and 80 media outlets, illuminating that of 60 women’s health businesses interviewed or surveyed, 100% of them experienced Facebook or Instagram rejecting their ads.

Jackie speaks around the world on topics including digital censorship of sexual and reproductive rights, and other topics at the intersections of sexuality, gender and technology. She regularly briefs US Congressional offices, state Attorneys General, and other technology and human rights leaders on the findings of CIJ’s investigations.

She is based in San Fransisco in the United States.

Key Info

  • Higher Education

    • Master of Business Administration | Stanford Graduate School of Business

    • Master of Public Administration | Harvard Kennedy School

    • Bachelor of Arts in Public Policy | Stanford

    • Women’s rights

    • Digital censorship of sexual rights

    • Digital censorship of reproductive rights

    • Intersections of sexuality, gender and technology

    • Equity in sexual wellbeing

    • New York Times | Vaginas Deserve Giant Ads, Too

    • New York Times | Why Did Facebook Reject These Ads?

    • Washington Post | Meta rejected scores of women’s health ads. Democrats want answers.

    • Femtech Insider | Meta Rewrites Its Global Ads Policy and Allows Sexual Health, Wellness, and Reproductive Health Ads

    • CNN | Advertising restrictions can have harmful effects on women’s health. Here’s what one company is doing about it

    • CNN | Meta criticized for making reproductive health an R-rated issue

Contact Center for Intimacy Justice