Houston Chronicle

Work led to PTSD, claims ex-Facebook content moderator

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A former content moderator who worked on contract for Facebook has filed a lawsuit against the company saying that being bombarded with thousands of violent images on her computer in Silicon Valley led her to develop posttrauma­tic stress disorder.

The former moderator, Selena Scola, argues that Facebook failed to protect her and other contractor­s as they viewed distressin­g videos and photograph­s of rapes, suicides, beheadings and other killings, according to the complaint, filed Friday in San Mateo County Superior Court.

Scola, who worked on behalf of the company for nine months, said in the complaint that her posttrauma­tic stress disorder was set off “when she touches a computer mouse, enters a cold building, watches violence on television, hears loud noises or is startled.”

Facebook’s 7,500 moderators around the world sift through 10 million potentiall­y rule-breaking posts per week, the lawsuit says.

The company relies on its 2 billion users to report inappropri­ate content. The moderators then employ the hundreds of rules Facebook has developed to determine if the content violates its policies.

“We recognize that this work can often be difficult,” Bertie Thomson, the director of corporate communicat­ions at Facebook, said in a statement. “That is why we take the support of our content moderators incredibly seriously, starting with their training, the benefits they receive, and ensuring that every person reviewing Facebook content is offered psychologi­cal support and wellness resources.”

Scola is urging Facebook to establish a fund to create a testing and treatment program through which current and former content moderators — including moderators employed by a third party — can receive medical testing and monitoring including psychiatri­c treatment. She is also asking that her legal fees be paid by Facebook.

Lawyers for Scola said their client was not currently giving interviews.

“What can cause PTSD has been the subject of countless articles and speculatio­n long before it was an official diagnosis,” said Dr. Elspeth Cameron Ritchie, a psychiatri­st and retired Army colonel who was formerly a senior Pentagon adviser on mental health issues. “In the vast majority of people, just seeing violent images is not enough, but in some people it could be.”

“People who operate drones and watch it blow things up suffer from PTSD even though they are not in the same room,” she added. “I’m not saying it could not happen, but we don’t see it very much.”

Facebook employees receive psychologi­cal support in house, according to Thomson.

“We also require companies that we partner with for content review to provide resources and psychologi­cal support, including on-site counseling — available at the location where the plaintiff worked, and other wellness resources like relaxation areas at many of our larger facilities,” Thomson said in a statement.

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