The Faculty of Forensic and Legal Medicine also stressed the need to prevent further trauma for survivors. "We do not advocate the use of 'self-swabbing' kits because they do not provide the opportunity for holistic psychosocial, medical and forensic assessment of the individual," it said in its report. It continued: "There is no evidence base that they are of benefit from a mental health perspective [...] they do not promote safeguarding of the vulnerable."
Enough privately dismissed the FFLM's report in emails sent to the University of Bristol, saying the faculty is in a "bubble".
White and Enough ambassadors say their campaign has actually contributed to raising awareness of SARCs, and expressed desires for SARCs to collaborate with the campaign.
"The whole time I was at Bristol, I never saw any information about sexual violence services but that has changed since Enough," said Ellie, who asked that we just use her first name, an Enough volunteer who has just completed her final year at the University of Bristol. "Now students know about the SARC and how to get help."
Ellie believes victims need the alternative that Enough offers to the process usually followed in the criminal justice system. "After something horrible happens, not everyone wants to go to the police or the hospital. They want to feel safe in their home."
Privacy advocates have also expressed concerns over the way in which Enough is handling victims' DNA and testimonies.
Asked by openDemocracy to provide feedback on Enough's data protection and privacy policy, London-based non-profit Privacy International said: "Where data is highly sensitive, as in this case, the obligation to be transparent is even greater. For us, compliance with data protection law is the baseline, not the benchmark – and in this case, neither the baseline nor any steps beyond it are clearly demonstrated."
In response, Enough said: "Our policy was developed with help from DNA and non-profit experts. DNA belongs to the survivor, no one else has access. The data is only used for two functions only – for the survivor to gain clarity after the rape, and if they want supporting evidence for a later police report."
The 'multi-billion-dollar industry'
Two months after its launch in the city, Enough sent a slide deck pitch to the University of Bristol's vice chancellor saying it had created a "credible deterrent" for rape on campus and asking for a £100,000 investment, adding: "100% of students at universities want Enough". It did not cite any evidence to support its claims.
Enough's pitch said that the £100,000 would provide free self-swab kits for every female fresher, as well as access to its free recovery resources. The company also solicited donations to a planned Enough charitable foundation.
The university did not invest. Instead, its lawyers accused Enough of "aggressively" marketing its product and "misleading" staff and students by implying that the company had its support, including by claiming the university's chief operating officer was Enough's "point of contact".
The university has "no connection with your organisation and does not endorse or recommend your services and your products", it wrote in an email on 6 January this year. It asked Enough to stop its approaches and its activities on campus.
Enough replied denying it had said it was endorsed by the university, saying: "We are obviously in contact with many people at the University. It would be strange if a University lawyer tried to suppress that free speech, especially given you have a leading criminology department (who have distributed our kits), and we are discussing how best to stop your students being raped."
A month later, the university's lawyers wrote: "We note that you continue to directly contact university staff despite the university's request that you cease this form of direct advertising of your company's products and services." Enough replied: "We still live in a free country and we can talk to who we like."
The same email from the University of Bristol raised concerns about the self-test kits' admissibility in court, to which Enough responded: "Interesting email from you as a lawyer – I'm assuming you studied the rules of evidence? [...] I think you should show us some respect, and even thanks, for the work we are doing with your students."
Enough faced similar difficulties at Bristol's other university. The University of West England told the company to submit an external speaker form before visiting its campus, after Enough said "we will be distributing kits and raising awareness among students this week" in an email to UWE staff on 1 December 2024. Enough disputed the need to obtain permission, saying: "Your students wish to engage their fellow students on campus to offer them the opportunity to know about Enough [...] You appear to be in breach of your own freedom of speech policy."
Months later, White and her ambassadors spent the day on a public roundabout that bordered the campus, but was not directly on its grounds. In an Instagram post at the time, Enough wrote: "On Tuesday morning we held an orange banner saying 'Enough to end rape' on the roundabout outside UWE. We brought the issue out into the open, something the university doesn't want to do."
Bristol's universities have not only objected to Enough's presence on their campuses, but the basis on which it justifies being there.
The company has frequently claimed that, every year, 500 people are raped at Bristol University, which has around 30,000 students, and 600 are raped at the University of West England, which has around 38,000 students. Both universities dispute these figures, which are extrapolated from a 2018 survey of 4,500 students at 153 universities across the UK, where 8% of respondents said they had been raped whilst at university.
In January this year, after the University of Bristol rejected the figure in its email to Enough, the company responded: "We have no issue if you dispute this number with journalists; however they will be focused on what you are actually doing about it, not whether it is 400, 500, or 600." UWE, in a December email, requested Enough "remove social media content about the number of reported rapes at UWE Bristol which is defamatory and a negligent misstatement".
White told openDemocracy she never expected the universities to collaborate with Enough. "At [the point of launching] Enough was an idea," said White. "We believed it could work from the research we'd done talking to survivors, but it was a hypothesis. Universities make decisions based on risk, and it was all risk at that point."
Other institutions have also sought to distance themselves from Enough. After White consulted with Avon and Somerset Police on how to direct victims to support in a crisis, the force accused Enough of seeking to "misrepresent" their relationship in a way that "is damaging", according to an email reviewed by openDemocracy.
"Neither the Constabulary or the PCC's [Police and Crime Commissioner] office have, at any time, provided agreement for you to present any statement quote or the use of our names as a way to support your campaign," wrote chief constable Sarah Crew, asking the company to "immediately refrain from misquoting us".
Enough told openDemocracy: "We did not misrepresent our relationship with the police or any other body. We accurately said that they had advised us. We are incredibly grateful for that advice."
In April this year, Enough acknowledged that it is "less likely" to obtain funding from universities, according to a pitch document sent to openDemocracy by an anonymous source. The company signalled that it is instead now hoping for government funding for "three multi-year pilot programmes to evaluate Enough's potential impact".
These pilots, the document said, "could be funded by grants from government or from major foundations", adding: "We would like to explore the potential participation of government departments within the proposed pilots."
It continued: "We have so far spent only about £100k and could run Bristol (University of Bristol + University of West England) ongoing, for about £200k per year [...] Enough could run at the top 100 UK universities for less than £10m per year."
Another slide deck used in a training webinar on student sexual health in summer 2025, states that Enough wants to "approach Home Office for funding." When we asked the Home Office about its relationship with Enough, a spokesperson reiterated the government's commitment to halving violence against women within a decade, and warned that it is important to be aware that self-swabs may not be admissible in court.
The company is also turning to another potential income stream: private brands. It is pitching a model in which a business pays Enough a "donation" to distribute free samples of its product alongside the rape kits. "Universities often charge brands £1,500+ for these activations," the company said in a LinkedIn post advertising to businesses last month. "We're simply asking for a suggested donation, 100% of which goes toward funding more kits for students."
Enough confirmed to us in a statement: "The entirety of that money would go to kits. We have other fundraising channels for overheads."
The 'breathalyser of rape'
It is hard to argue against the motivations and intentions of White and Allchurch, or their company. There is a truly staggering epidemic of sexual violence in the UK, with an estimated 798,000 women raped and sexually assaulted each year in England and Wales, according to Cambridge Rape Crisis Centre.
But in its focus on DNA testing kits and supposed social deterrence through anonymous online reports, Enough has fallen into the usual Silicon Valley trap: the belief that one bright idea, prompted by a conversation at a party, could change the world with the right technology.
"An idea shouldn't fail because it doesn't have the infrastructure and financing to test it, it should fail if it's a bad idea," White told openDemocracy. In the same conversation, White returned to the idea that the only way to know if something works is to try. "There has to be a phase of learning, and asking what are the hypotheses? What are the risks associated with that? How can we most mitigate those risks?"
But rape victims cannot be used as guinea pigs as Enough incubates its idea; they are vulnerable and traumatised individuals who need to trust that the support being offered to them is in their best interests. And Enough's support is made more difficult to trust because the company bears another key hallmark of tech start-ups: over-confident boasts of success.
By May 2025, six months after launching in Bristol, Enough announced it had created a "70% deterrence" of sexual assault in Bristol, on an Instagram post.The figure, Enough confirmed to us, was based on Instagram polls conducted by three student societies at the University of Bristol, who asked their followers if they knew about Enough, trusted Enough, and thought Enough had created a deterrence against sexual violence.
White told us that "about 250" people responded to the polls. Even if you assume that all of these people were current students, it would be a sample size of less than 1% of Bristol University's total student population. In any case, students believing that a deterrence exists does not make that a reality. Even if one does exist, it is impossible to know whether this is because would-be abusers now know about the kits, or for any number of other reasons.
Enough also claimed that "50% of all rapes" are now being reported to its website. This fails to consider how many of the incidents reported are non-recent assaults, and how the "50%" is based on the disputed "500 rapes" annually on campus figure.
White told openDemocracy that Enough wants to do a proper evaluation of its impact – emails even show it approached UoB for support on this – but needs more investment to do so. But understanding this need for more thorough research hasn't stopped the company from trotting out unscientific data to demonstrate impact to supporters, funders and investors.
White compares Enough's approach to a "breathalyser", which she says created a social deterrence to drink-driving. This fails to recognise that breathalysers are administered by police, protecting the chain of custody so the evidence of drink-driving can be used in a prosecution. Self swab kits do not achieve this. Breathalysers also prove a driver was drunk, while self-swab kits do not prove rape, only the presence of a second set of DNA.
"Violence against women and girls is an incredibly entrenched social problem and the known consequences for perpetrators have done little to prevent it. I've worked with perpetrators of all forms of abusive behaviour, including rape and sexual abuse specifically. Nobody has ever said to me that they wouldn't have done what they did, had they known that being reported to the police were an option – they knew that to begin with," said Rape Crisis' Ciara Bergman.
"Whilst it may not be intended, the trouble with distributing and selling self-swab kits to survivors is it implies that to avoid or end rape, they are the ones who need to change their behaviour – by buying something or displaying it in their home. To us, that's victim blame, which we reject."
Bergman said she shared the pain and frustrations expressed by women that the criminal justice system and the police are failing them. "But our approach is to locate responsibility for rape with perpetrators, and to change existing systems so that they're fit for purpose, rather than to try to replace them with unproven alternatives which could risk letting women down in their darkest hour".
In a statement, Enough said: "Enough clearly communicates that an Enough report is the last resort and that the police and the SARC come first. To insist that everyone reports to either of those two is unethical and leaves five in six survivors unsupported.
"If a survivor decides to not report to a SARC/ the police, and makes a report to Enough, they will be signposted to two key pages: 'Next Steps' and 'Crisis Information'. These were developed with the advice of Avon and Somerset Police. No reporting option can be everything to everyone. Enough is part of the solution, intended to support those who would have otherwise done nothing."
But Lily, the student from Bristol who told White that she did not think the kits were the way to approach ending rape, believes Enough has missed an opportunity to make real change.
"We already have rape kits, we already have mechanisms in place," she said. "They could have campaigned on the causes of rape. They could have started talking openly and honestly about misogyny in societies, the culture of sexual assault. Instead, they are selling rape kits."
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