More than 200 high-profile women sign open letter asking for action against online abuse

World+Biz

TBS Report
01 July, 2021, 08:45 pm
Last modified: 01 July, 2021, 08:53 pm
The letter - signed by women including former Australian prime minister Julia Gillard, ex-US tennis player Billie Jean King and British actresses Thandiwe Newton and Emma Watson - has been published at the UN Generation Equality Forum

More than 200 high-profile women have signed an open letter asking for concrete action to tackle abuse on social media platforms.

The letter - signed by women including former Australian prime minister Julia Gillard, ex-US tennis player Billie Jean King and British actresses Thandiwe Newton and Emma Watson - has been published at the UN Generation Equality Forum, reports the BBC.

"As prime minister of Australia, like other women in the public domain, I regularly received highly gendered and ugly social media, including the circulation of pornographic cartoons" said Gillard.

She added that it made her "angry and frustrated that women still face this kind of abuse".

The letter was addressed to the chief executives of Facebook, Google, TikTok and Twitter, and asked them to "urgently prioritise the safety of women on your platforms".

In response, the social media chiefs said that they will commit to improving systems on reporting abuse, and filter what users see and who can interact with them online.

However, some campaigners have expressed concerns that these commitments do not go far enough.

"These abstract statements offer tech companies a good PR opportunity, but these aren't real commitments," said Lucina Di Meco, co-founder of #ShePersisted Global, which tackles online attacks against women.

"They aren't specifically offering to look at content moderation or algorithmic preferences that will reward bad behaviour. So far, we are still putting the burden on women."

The letter reads: "The internet is the town square of the 21st Century. It is where debate takes place, communities are built, products are sold and reputations are made.

"But the scale of online abuse means that, for too many women, these digital town squares are unsafe. This is a threat to progress on gender equality."

The letter also pointed to a 2020 study of more than 4,000 adult women by The Economist Intelligence Unit, which found that 38% of them in 51 countries have had direct experience of online intimidation.

And it also emphasises online abuse is worse for marginalised groups and black, Asian, Latin American and mixed-race women.

"It is really important that we recognise that abuse and harassment against women on social media platforms is widespread, and that it is one of the biggest barriers to gender equality," said Azmina Dhrodia, senior policy manager at the World Wide Web Foundation.

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