The National Center on Sexual Exploitation released its 2018 “Dirty Dozen List” Monday that names the year’s top facilitators of sexual exploitation in society and culture. The annual list features mainstream companies that allow the promotion of sexual violence, prostitution, and even media that exploits children.

“Our Dirty Dozen List gets results,” Haley Halverson, Vice President of Advocacy and Outreach at the National Center on Sexual Exploitation said in a statement. “It has instigated changes at institutions like Google, the Department of Defense, and Hilton Worldwide, which is why we continue this impactful initiative year after year.”

“We are talking about mainstream corporations and services like Apple’s iBooks, Google’s YouTube, Roku and Twitter,” she emphasized, “which the American people use and interact with every day on a mass scale— and which simultaneously promote or profit from messages of incest, the dehumanization of women, sexual violence and even racism and child exploitation.”

"Our nation is experiencing a reawakening to how pervasive sexual assault, sexual violence, and sexual harassment are,” Halverson added in reference to the MeToo movement. “Simultaneously, however, mainstream services like Apple’s iBooks are providing access to erotic literature that supports rape myths, normalizes adult-with-teen-themed and incest-themed exploitation, and reinforces degrading, racially charged sexual stereotypes.”

Amazon made the list for facilitating “the sale of materials that sexualize children and normalize the dehumanization and sexual commodification of women,” including, “eroticized child nudity photography books, sex dolls (many with childlike features,) and books with ‘how to’ instructions for sex trafficking.”

Twitter was cited as a “major platform to disseminate hardcore pornography and facilitate prostitution.” They add that the platform has “removed the ability to search for these terms directly in video or picture tabs,” but “there are still countless pornographic accounts which often serve as advertisements for pornography websites or online prostitution.”

They also named YouTube for “failing to proactively monitor or restrict sexually graphic content” and forcing “users to go through a rigorous process, which includes watching the material, if they want to report the content for removal.”

See the full list below: