Fashion photography is the latest industry to face a round of sexual misconduct accusations against powerful men, though the alleged victims in this case are not women.

A New York Times report published Saturday detailed credible allegations against photographers Bruce Weber and Mario Testino.

Here's part of what the report said on Weber:

Fifteen current and former male models who worked with Bruce Weber, whose racy advertisements for companies like Calvin Klein and Abercrombie & Fitch helped turn him into one of the foremost commercial and fine art photographers, have described to The New York Times a pattern of what they said was unnecessary nudity and coercive sexual behavior, often during photo shoots.

And here's how it described the allegations against Testino:

In accounts going back to the mid-1990s, 13 male assistants and models who have worked with the photographer Mario Testino, a favorite of the English royal family and Vogue, told The Times that he subjected them to sexual advances that in some cases included groping and masturbation.

Both men are alleged in the article to have reputations for their misconduct, something that's sure to spark a conversation like the one that triggered Harvey Weinstein's downfall, questioning whether the industry enables abuse. And it should.

Times reporter Jodi Kantor, who first reported on the allegations against Weinstein, tweeted the report out with the caption: "These are two of the top fashion photographers in the world. For years, people knew and stayed silent." As in the Weinstein case, nobody knows right now exactly who was aware of the allegations and decided to look the other way, but when it comes to Weber and Testino, both of whom worked with the industry's most powerful outlets and clients, plenty of people could be implicated. By Monday, Conde Nast issued a statement severing ties with both men, each of whom has denied the allegations. Vogue Editor in Chief Anna Wintour, who noted her personal friendships with Weber and Testino, published a statement endorsing the company's decision as well.

Quoted in the Times report, designer Tom Ford plainly noted, "We sell sex."

If an industry's purpose is indeed to sell sex, the business of doing so without simultaneously engendering a culture of abuse and exploitation is difficult, to say the least.