According to the paper, Tech Crunch pointed out that Twitter administrators are known for their censorship-free stance and only budge when it is a question of legality.
This view is shown in Vine's terms of service, as they do not explicitly ban sexual content, the paper said.
The only function in place right now to regulate the videos is a button where viewers can mark a video as inappropriate, the paper added.
That said, such a tag will not necessarily remove the video: if a certain- though unknown- number of people mark the video as inappropriate, it will be given a warning before the video, but it will still be allowed to run.