Google will turn up a fair amount of links on this.

I think this is noteworthy as a new low in turns of what a prominent man can be accused of. It's a trial balloon of sorts, an attempt at shifting the Overton Window.

tldr; He wasn't accused of anything illegal, merely of paying attention, presumably in the hopes of some sexual activity, then withdrawing it unexpectedly, causing psychological trauma.

Basically, Warren Ellis, a somewhat famous comic book creator, attracted the attention of "aspiring models" and other attention hungry women. This led to a lot of online chatting, and attempts by Warren to extract nudes, or sexually provocative pictures, and maybe consensual favors. Nobody is accusing him of rape or sexual assault, or anything illegal. Instead, he's being accused of psychological abuse because he would pay attention, then withdraw it, presumably, if he thought he wasn't going to get what he wanted.

But where have we seen THIS behavior before, hmmmm??? To all the guys who have invested inordinate amounts of time, energy, money, attention, or whatever, into a supposed relationship with a woman, only to be ghosted, gaslit, or told to fuck off when there was no advantage to the association, in accordance with Briffault's law. Do we see the women being accused of some moral crime?

What's hilarious, is that each of these women probably has 20-30 orbiters of her own that she extracts from, and who do the orbiters have?

The women were attracted to Warren because he was a famous celebrity who opened himself up to mentorship requests, albeit apparently from attractive women. He actually helped a lot of these women with their careers. But, since he was juggling so many of them, and is also married IRL, which he disclosed to a fair number, if not all of them (What the hell were supposedly moral women doing reaching out to a married man? Let the motherfucker get a divorce first, or don't waste your time.), so he couldn't possibly pay attention to all of them at the same time while keeping up with his work and family responsibilities.

For many of them, this may have been their only brush with greatness: knowing a celebrity.

And then of course, they experience massive entitlement, and want to bootstrap attention off of him in perpetuity.

So, they put together a website, and most of the accusers are anonymous, and the usual suspects pick up the accusations and amplify them.

The women claim that they want to get rid of the power dynamic that created the "abuse," but they were the ones that elected to kiss up to a powerful man in the hopes of career advancement, and who even played along with his little sexual fantasy games. Only, when it didn't work out how they expected, they get angry and butthurt at having their expectations dashed.