Facebook ‘rejects’ panic button
April 21st, 2010 - 3:48 pm ICT by ANI
London, Apr 21 (ANI): Facebook has turned down the offer to adopt or test a button designed to protect children from bullying and abuse, according to police.Officials at the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP) said management at the social networking site cannot agree on the move.
After waiting for the outcome of in-house talks following a showdown meeting in Washington DC eight days ago, Dr Zoe Hilton, of CEOP, said that her colleagues are ‘disappointed’ that an agreement could not finally be reached.
She said a subsequent promise by Facebook to share more information with police is ’simply overdue’ and something other firms do ‘as a matter of course’.
Hilton added that moves by the company to promote its own measures were ‘very little, very late in the day,” reports the Telegraph.
The CEOP child safety button has led to an embarrassing public row for Facebook.
The American company has faced an unprecedented fusillade of pleas from CEOP, police chiefs, politicians, charities and campaign groups who support its use.
After the meeting last Monday Jim Gamble, who leads CEOP, said that the firm was ‘one small step’ from ‘doing the right thing’.
However, it has now emerged that the stalemate could not be broken despite subsequent meetings at Facebook’s California headquarters.
Facebook has agreed to add the button to its safety and help areas, but was averse to incorporate it on its most popular pages.
The company has also unveiled a redesigned abuse reporting system and offered free advertising worth 5 million pounds to Internet safety organisations.
Officials at CEOP said Facebook is ‘missing the point’ and that they will continue to call on the firm to adopt their reporting process.
They said there are no legal barriers to sharing information, the button is a proven deterrent and that CEOP could handle the volume of reports. (ANI)
- Facebook refuses to add safety buttons - Apr 14, 2010
- Facebook's panic button to report child abuse - Jul 12, 2010
- Facebook 'ignores users' panic button demand - Apr 09, 2010
- Launch of Facebook 'panic button' prompts surge in abuse reports - Aug 13, 2010
- Facebook to launch 'panic button' to report sex offenders - Jul 12, 2010
- More teens exposing explicit images on Internet, prone to paedophiles - Nov 07, 2010
- Facebook urged to add "panic buttons" - Apr 13, 2010
- Facebook in discussions to install 'panic button' link - May 28, 2010
- Facebook Launches New "Panic Button" To Protect Kids - Jul 12, 2010
- World's largest paedophile ring busted, 31 Australians arrested - Mar 17, 2011
- Facebook, MySpace, slammed for not introducing 'help button to protect kids' - Nov 18, 2009
- Facebook vows new measures against bullying - Aug 12, 2010
- Facebook refuses to embed 'report abuse' button - Nov 19, 2009
- Facebook vows to combat alarming 'trolling' abuse trend - Aug 12, 2010
- British kids call police after bullying on Facebook - Apr 13, 2012
Tags: california headquarters, campaign groups, ceop, child exploitation and online protection, child exploitation and online protection centre, doing the right thing, facebook, free advertising, fusillade, help areas, jim gamble, late in the day, legal barriers, matter of course, missing the point, panic button, police chiefs, safety button, safety organisations, social networking site