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Christian Phone Network Launches with Mandatory Porn and Gender Content Blocks

DECRYPTED BY: Isla Thorne | TIMESTAMP: 2026-05-01 T 21:11:49 Z | [ 2 MIN READ ]
Christian Phone Network Launches with Mandatory Porn and Gender Content Blocks
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Christian Phone Network Launches with Mandatory Porn and Gender Content Blocks

Radiant Mobile, an MVNO built on T‑Mobile’s infrastructure, is set to debut its Christian phone network on May 5, promising a Jesus‑centric environment free of porn and LGBT material. The plan blocks adult sites at the network level, a move experts say is unprecedented in the United States.

The service, marketed through churches and Christian influencers, charges ↑ $30 per month per subscriber, with a portion earmarked for church donations. Founder Paul Fisher, a former fashion agent, says the network will also filter “sexuality” content by default, though adults can adjust settings.

Technical Backbone and Partnerships

Radiant works with Israeli cyber firm Allot to categorize over a hundred website types, from pornography to “sects.” When a user attempts to load a blocked domain, the page simply fails to appear, a harsher approach than app‑based filters like Covenant Eyes. Reuters notes that similar MVNO models have surged recently, but none have imposed immutable blocks.

“We’re trying to close the digital door on explicit material,” says Chris Klimis, COO and Orlando minister.

The gender‑related filter falls under Allot’s “sexuality” category, which also captures LGBTQ information. Fisher warns that if a news site hosts enough trans content, it could be labeled and blocked entirely, citing a potential block of Yale’s lgbtq.yale.edu subdomain while the main site stays accessible.

Radiant has secured ↑ $17.5 million in funding from Compax Ventures, with Nvidia executive Roger Bringmann as a silent backer. The company plans to supplement blocked sites with a curated library of religious videos, including AI‑generated sermons featuring licensed characters from Elf Labs.

Critics like Northeastern’s David Choffnes argue that such blanket censorship mirrors authoritarian tactics and risks overblocking, noting that “the internet is messy; a sledgehammer approach is rarely effective.” Nonetheless, Radiot’s backers believe the demand for a faith‑aligned digital space justifies the trade‑off.

Correction: The launch date was updated to May 5 after earlier reports listed a different week.


Reported by: Isla Thorne

Guest Technology Correspondent
(Note: Isla Thorne is covering this desk while Nova Stirling is recovering from the flu.)

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