Craigslist ‘not doing enough to end sex trafficking on its site’
September 3rd, 2010 - 4:36 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, Sept 3 (ANI): Recently, female victims of sex trafficking on the website Craigslist pleaded with founder Craig Newmark to delete the adult services section of the site, where sex ads are frequently placed, until adequate safeguards are put in place.
In his response, Craigslist CEO Jim Buckmaster claimed that sex trafficking “rarely” occurs on the website, reports The Politico.
However, since the past 14 months when it implemented manual screening, Craigslist has made only 109 reports to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children - less than 1 percent of the 700,000 ads were actually reported to the proper authorities.
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children President and CEO Ernie Allen addressed the shift of sexual exploitation from the streets to Craigslist and other online venues, where children are marketed for sex.
Although the website has employed credit card validation, screening ads, and reported suspicious ads, “American kids continue to be marketed and sold online for sex. The problem is not declining, it is growing. The goal is to end this insidious ‘industry.’ Craigslist needs to do more, and every other online classifieds company needs to join them,” she said.
Although the site has asked users to report any illicit content, the final responsibility is its own. And with expected earnings of $36 million dollars this year from its adult services section alone, Craigslist has the resources to prevent and respond to sex trafficking on its site.
Politico has reiterated the request made by the 16 state attorneys general for Craigslist to shut down its adult services section, saying that “trying” to fix this problem is just not good enough when children are the victims. (ANI)
- Online ad website accused of being 'hub for child prostitution' - Aug 09, 2010
- Craigslist dumps 'adult service' ads - Sep 05, 2010
- Craigslist Censors Its 'Adult Services' Segment - Sep 06, 2010
- Public Outrage Leads Craigslist To Censor Adult Services - Sep 04, 2010
- Craigslist 'pulls off explicit sex ads globally' - Dec 20, 2010
- Ads for prostitution and erotic services still visible on Craigslist - Sep 06, 2010
- Craigslist responds to claims of promoting prostitution - Aug 10, 2010
- NYC hookers 'selling sex on Facebook' - Feb 10, 2011
- 14-year-old British Columbia girl arrested for luring teens into prostitution - Nov 20, 2010
- Super Bowl's 'dark side' - Child sex trafficking - Feb 02, 2011
- US report highlights trafficking in India - Jun 28, 2011
- Child sex trafficking in UK on the rise with younger victims being groomed - Jan 17, 2011
- World's largest paedophile ring busted, 31 Australians arrested - Mar 17, 2011
- Human trafficking manual helps police in northeast - Feb 20, 2011
- Children's advocate says decision not to extradite Polanski "disturbing" - Jul 13, 2010
Tags: adequate safeguards, adult services, american kids, center for missing and exploited children, ceo jim, craig newmark, craigslist, credit card validation, earnings, ernie allen, illicit content, jim buckmaster, million dollars, missing and exploited children, national center for missing and exploited children, proper authorities, sex ads, sex trafficking, sexual exploitation, state attorneys