College Sports Commission launches ‘snitch’ reporting line for NIL rule violations

The College Sports Commission (CSC) launched an anonymous tipline on Wednesday that allows people to confidentially report potential violations of the rules surrounding name, image and likeness (NIL) payments and direct revenue sharing in college sports. College sports’ power conferences created the CSC in the wake of the House v. NCAA settlement, which was formally approved in June and went into effect on July 1. It is charged with overseeing rules related to the multi-billion-dollar antitrust

College Sports Commission launches ‘snitch’ reporting line for NIL rule violationsThe College Sports Commission (CSC) launched an anonymous tipline on Wednesday that allows people to confidentially report potential violations of the rules surrounding name, image and likeness (NIL) payments and direct revenue sharing in college sports.

College sports’ power conferences created the CSC in the wake of the House v. NCAA settlement, which was formally approved in June and went into effect on July 1. It is charged with overseeing rules related to the multi-billion-dollar antitrust settlement, including the revenue-sharing model between schools and college athletes, as well as the NIL Go clearinghouse that manages third-party NIL deals.

The new CSC “snitch” line allows for anonymous reports via phone call, text, email or document uploads. All identifying information from the submissions is protected.

These crowdsourced reports can be made by “anyone with information or concerns about potential rule violations,” whether they are directly involved in college athletics or are members of the general public. The reports go directly to CSC staff members, who can follow up on and investigate the information as needed.

“This anonymous tipline provides an essential tool for identifying potential rules violations, gathering additional information and ultimately enforcing these new rules,” said Bryan Seeley, CEO of the CSC. “We’re committed to robust enforcement of the rules while protecting those who come forward with useful information.”

The NCAA, which remains separate from the CSC, has long had a similar watchdog system in place for confidential reporting of rules violations.

Wednesday’s announcement comes on the heels of a rocky rollout for the CSC. In early July, just days after the organization was up and running, it issued new guidance targeting NIL payments from booster-led collectives that, according to the House plaintiff attorneys, contradicted the settlement agreement. The CSC walked back and revised that guidance a few weeks later.

Then, in September, the CSC released its first report on the number and value of third-party NIL deals approved through the NIL Go clearinghouse, which is managed in conjunction with the Deloitte accounting firm. A few days later, the CSC issued a correction to that data, citing a “clerical error” by Deloitte that reduced the value of approved third-party NIL deals from nearly $80 million, as initially reported, to just over $35 million through the end of August.

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

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