Facebook's 'community' must include some pretty sick people
The Times
Facebook is an admired social network for many of its users, but there are pages that host
disturbing and potentially illegal content that most people would find alarming
“Welcome,” one forum poster said, “to the darkest corner of the web.” The writer was not referring to encrypted messaging services or obscure internet chatrooms. He was talking about Facebook.
The world’s most popular social media network hosts communities where users exchange images of children so explicit that they are likely to breach UK laws.
The images found by The Times have been carefully edited or blurred, especially this image,
which was found on a Fro(xxxxxxx) page
Facebook often allows the content to remain on the site, an investigation by The Times shows. In some cases, the network’s automatic algorithms even promote such content to users that they think might be interested.
Fro(xxxxxxx), a group with almost 5,000 members, is dedicated to posting pictures of drawings depicting prepubescent females. Many of the pictures on the forum depict young girls or toddlers being violently abused. They remain accessible on Facebook despite a 2009 British law outlawing any images, including cartoons, that depict children in a grossly offensive and pornographic manner.
Using a fake profile set up to investigate offensive content on the site, The Times reported the worst cartoons to Facebook. Its moderators decided to keep up many of the images including two that, according to a leading QC, “plainly” contravene UK law.
A cursory glance at Fro(xxxxxxx) would have raised concerns. On the group’s Facebook download page, a document entitled “Sexual life of the child” is freely available.
Facebook’s decision to keep up such content could expose it to prosecution
Many members joke about paedophilic activity, including one who boasted about seeing “the most beautiful girl today . . . she was 5 or 6, but sadly I did not get to talk to her and no interaction was made except for eye contact”. When another user questioned his remarks, the member said: “This is a pedo page.” A third user, one of the most prolific commentators, asked: “Why are little girls so f***ing sexy dammit?”
Little girls are not the least sexy! You are sick in the head! Get some help!
Although Fro(xxxxxxx) purportedly shows only cartoons of abuse, images of real children appear on it and dozens of other similar forums such as Lol(xxxxx) and Raep(xxxxxx). The Times found images including a pornographic child-abuse DVD, an adolescent-looking child posing naked in a wig and a video of a young child apparently being forced to give oral sex.
All three images were kept online when reported to Facebook, which considered they were not in breach of its community standards. Julian Knowles, QC, a criminal law expert, said that the latter video would “undoubtedly breach UK indecency laws” and appeared to depict a sexual assault on a child.
Facebook’s decision to keep up such content could expose it to prosecution itself.
Mr Knowles said that if someone reported an illegal image to Facebook, and a senior moderator signed off on keeping it online, then “Facebook is at risk of committing a criminal offence because the company might be regarded as assisting or encouraging its publication and distribution”.
British politicians have already expressed fury at the company’s failure to remove terrorist content. Ministers are considering enforcing a German proposal that would fine internet companies millions of pounds if they failed to remove illegal or hate-filled content within a reasonable time.
Fro(xxxxxxx) was not discovered as a result of a tip-off. The Times accessed the group because Facebook’s own algorithms suggested it to our fake profile, which we set up last month to investigate inappropriate content.
Having joined a group called Lol(xxxxx), our imaginary male Facebook user was recommended to join Fro(xxxxxxx) under the site’s “suggested groups” section. When he joined, he was recommended other groups to consider. Many published potentially illegal content.
Promoting such groups could also land Facebook in legal trouble, Mr Knowles said.
“If Facebook’s algorithms suggest groups which involve members distributing or exchanging indecent or prohibited images or terrorist material then if that fact has been brought to Facebook’s attention and it continues to do nothing about it, then subject to proving knowledge on the part of the company, it is at risk of committing an offence by assisting or encouraging the distribution of illegal material,” he said.
A simple search of Facebook using keywords associated with paedophilia brings up dozens of groups apparently acting as marketplaces for the exchange of illegal child-abuse content.
Even here, Facebook appears to be reluctant to act. The Times reported one group because it openly called for videos of children under 13 to be posted by members before they would be allowed to join. Facebook’s moderators thanked us for raising it, but said: “We’ve looked over the group that you reported and . . . it doesn’t go against any of our specific community standards.”
Most of the groups are “closed” — you have to be invited by someone to enter — but Facebook allows anyone to see who has already joined. A group named after an acronym used by paedophiles, featured a heavily made-up child from Spain. The girl, who looks about ten, is recorded on Facebook as being a “sex professional”. The profile was being reviewed by Facebook.
Mr Knowles said that although the image was not illegal in itself, if groups facilitated the exchange of illegal images of children and with the knowledge of Facebook, then the company was at risk of committing a criminal offence too.
After The Times’s fake user applied to join some of the child-abuse groups, Facebook’s algorithms suggested that he might “like” the page of a ten-year-old dancer because they had identified her as being of possible interest.
Facebook, like Google and Twitter, is under pressure from politicians and companies to clean out extremist and hateful material.
More than 250 global advertisers boycotted YouTube after The Times revealed that it had inadvertently funded extremists who posted on the site. The company apologised and overhauled its brand safety systems to remove adverts from five times as many videos.
The aftermath of an ISIS beheading, found on Facebook
Last month MPs on the home affairs select committee criticised the companies for failing to remove hate content. Yvette Cooper, the chairwoman, said that it was disgraceful that antisemitic videos were hosted on YouTube. She warned the company that it faced financial penalties if it failed to act. “Google [which owns YouTube] is one of the richest companies on the planet with sophisticated technology,” she said. “It is quite capable of sorting this.”
It is also quite capable of paying fines til the cows come home, especially if they are making money by supporting sick and evil people. People need to be tried and sent to prison, then you will get their attention.
Tim Loughton, a Tory MP, said social networks abided by “completely different standards”. He said: “If you are an employer and you take on an illegal immigrant and they are discovered, saying, ‘I had no idea’ is not a defence, and you’ll be fined. Why should it be any different [with social networks]?”
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