Researcher Lara Putnam wrote that Facebook has a problem with “child predation.”
Putnam, a UCIS Research Professor in the Department of History at the University of Pittsburgh, was working on a project about “disinformation” when she discovered some concerning things about the platform.
Putnam wrote the following: Wired that she had searched for the 10th, 11th, or 12th wards of the City of Pittsburgh when the phrase “Buscando novi@ de 9,10,11,12,13 años.” The meaning of the phrase? “Looking for a 9-year old girlfriend.”
“The page’s aesthetic was cartoon cute: oversized eyes with long lashes, hearts, and pastels,” Putnam wrote. “The posts that made explicit references to photographed genitalia were gamified and spangled with emoticons: ‘See your age in this list? Type it into the replies and I’ll show ‘it’ to you.”
Putnam was terrified.
“Most often posts were just doorways to connection, the real danger offstage. ‘Looking for a perverted girlfriend of 11,’ read one post, with purple background and heart emojis. Replies asked for friend requests to continue via Messenger, or offered entry to private groups or WhatsApp chats—away from the eyes of even a digital passerby.”
One of the worst things about the incident was Facebook’s visibility of the results.
“[A]s late as January 2022—three months into my efforts to get action taken against them—if I searched 11, 12, 13 on the platform, 23 of the first 30 results were groups targeting children of those ages, with group names that included the words boyfriend/girlfriend, novio/a, or niños/niñas, sometimes along with ‘pervertidos,’ ‘hot,’ etc,” Putnam wrote. “They totaled over 81,000 members.”
It should be noted that no one under the age of 13 is “allowed” to join Facebook. A study found that 45 percent of US kids aged 9-12 used Facebook every day.
Putnam said that she could find the posts in several languages in different countries and violated Facebook’s rules.
“Everyone interacting in such a group is by definition a child violating Facebook policies by being on Facebook, an adult violating Facebook policies by impersonating a child, or an adult openly acting as an adult as they violate Facebook policy (and multiple state and international laws) by seeking sexualized contact with children,” she added.
Horrifically, Facebook said the group did not violate any of the platform’s rules after Putnam reported it. Putnam argued that “AI-driven algorithms” were the problem.
“If your local mall had a whole section of storefronts advertising ‘Boys and girls 10, 11, 12 years old, come find your sexy romance here’—with open doors leading back into a warren of hidden photo booths—and the mall owners set up a free on-demand shuttle service to pick up any child at any time—would we shrug and say, oh well, nothing to be done? Blame the parents, look away?” she asked.
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