Facebook vows to combat alarming ‘trolling’ abuse trend
August 12th, 2010 - 12:16 pm ICT by ANI
London, Aug 12 (ANI): Facebook has promised to design new security measures to curb the increasing cyber bullying instances and abuse of strangers online.
Engineers at Facebook are reportedly working on new systems to fight the trend of “trolling”, where anonymous online users “bombard” victims with offensive messages or abuse.
The news comes weeks after the announcement that children using Facebook could now report bullying and suspicious behaviour directly to the authorities after the launch of a new application.
The application called “ClickCEOP” had been downloaded more than 10,000 times since its launch last month.
“We’re working with Facebook. They are a good partner and we’re going to get closer and closer to them,” The Telegraph quoted Jim Gamble, the chief executive of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP), as telling ITV News.
Gamble had warned the site that officers had seen a significant increase in complaints from parents and children reporting alleged paedophiles, bullies and hackers who were exploiting the site.
A Facebook spokesman said that engineers were developing new programmes to combat the threat.
“Users who send lots of messages to non-friends, for example, or whose friend requests are rejected at a high rate, are marked as suspect,” he said.
He added, “Through the reporting process our team is also able to identify additional accounts using the same IP address so it is possible in certain situations to proactively remove multiple fake accounts.” (ANI)
- Facebook vows new measures against bullying - Aug 12, 2010
- Facebook to launch 'panic button' to report sex offenders - Jul 12, 2010
- Launch of Facebook 'panic button' prompts surge in abuse reports - Aug 13, 2010
- Facebook's panic button to report child abuse - Jul 12, 2010
- Facebook 'ignores users' panic button demand - Apr 09, 2010
- Facebook refuses to add safety buttons - Apr 14, 2010
- Facebook Launches New "Panic Button" To Protect Kids - Jul 12, 2010
- More teens exposing explicit images on Internet, prone to paedophiles - Nov 07, 2010
- British kids call police after bullying on Facebook - Apr 13, 2012
- Facebook 'rejects' panic button - Apr 21, 2010
- Facebook urged to add "panic buttons" - Apr 13, 2010
- Paedophiles 'increasingly accessing indecent pics of kids from webcams' - Jul 02, 2010
- Facebook refuses to embed 'report abuse' button - Nov 19, 2009
- Facebook in discussions to install 'panic button' link - May 28, 2010
- Facebook, MySpace, slammed for not introducing 'help button to protect kids' - Nov 18, 2009
Tags: additional accounts, bullies, ceop, chief executive, child exploitation and online protection, child exploitation and online protection centre, facebook, fake accounts, hackers, instances, itv news, jim gamble, launch, new application, new programmes, new security measures, offensive messages, parents and children, spokesman, suspicious behaviour