San Francisco Chronicle

Taking 24hour Instagram break

- By Kellen Browning

One by one, celebritie­s came forward this week to say they were sick of the misinforma­tion and hate speech on Instagram and its parent company, Facebook. Many of them — Kim Kardashian West, Katy Perry, Leonardo DiCaprio — have tens of millions of followers on social media.

Then the stars went further. They were not just speaking up to protest Facebook, they said, but would take action, too. On Wednesday, they froze their Instagram accounts for 24 hours and did not post anything on the photoshari­ng site as a kind of moratorium against Facebook.

But the move, which the celebritie­s made in concert with the Stop Hate for Profit Campaign, a coalition of civil rights organizati­ons that had organized an ad boycott of Facebook in July, quickly became fodder for online criticism. On Twitter, people called the celebrity Instagram freeze a stunt. “Oh god what a sacrifice” to stop posting for a day, one user wrote. Another posted an eyerolllik­e emoji and said, “Way to take a risk

“These stunts are worthless if temporary and shortlived (which they always are),” tweeted Jenna Golden, the head of a consulting firm in Washington.

people.”

The reaction resembled the griping over how #BlackoutTu­esday, meant to show support for the Black Lives Matter movement by posting images of black boxes on Instagram, was an ineffectiv­e performati­ve gesture rather than a substantiv­e action.

“These stunts are worthless if temporary and shortlived (which they always are),” tweeted Jenna Golden, the head of a consulting firm in Washington, mirroring a common sentiment on Twitter. “If anything, they shine a light on the fact that we cannot live without these platforms since everyone always comes back (brands included.)”

It was a far cry from what the organizers of the Instagram freeze had hoped to achieve. The Stop Hate for Profit Campaign — which is made up of civil rights organizati­ons including the AntiDefama­tion League and the NAACP — has had success over the past few months in getting others to take action against Facebook for its distributi­on of toxic content. In July, the campaign persuaded more than 1,000 of Facebook’s advertiser­s, including Ben & Jerry’s and Puma, to pause their spending on ads on the platform.

In an interview Tuesday, Jim Steyer, CEO of Common Sense Media in San Francisco, a nonprofit group that is part of the campaign, said the Instagram freeze is just the first step in a new round of messaging.

After the 24 hours of the freeze is over, he said, celebritie­s such as Sacha Baron Cohen and Demi Lovato would begin posting educationa­l messages aimed at young people. The messages would promote democracy and explain how social media companies spread disinforma­tion, broadcast hate speech and allow farright groups to form online.

The freeze “is designed to keep up the pressure,” Steyer said. Of Facebook and Instagram, he added, “they are by far the worst platforms in terms of amplifying hate speech, amplifying racist messages and underminin­g democracy.”

Steyer said he expects more celebritie­s, as well as groups and individual­s, to hop on board the Instagram freeze as the campaign spreads.

A Facebook spokesman declined to comment.

The freeze effort began Monday, when people including Baron Cohen and Mark Ruffalo posted that they were part of the campaign.

On Tuesday, Kardashian West joined in.

“I can’t sit by and stay silent while these platforms continue to allow the spreading of hate, propaganda and misinforma­tion — created by groups to sow division and split America apart — only to take steps after people are killed,” she tweeted to her 66.7 million followers, urging them to also freeze their Instagram and Facebook accounts.

In total, the campaign said, at least 14 celebritie­s were taking part in the social media effort, including Jennifer Lawrence, Ruffalo and Kerry Washington.

Despite the backlash, some people were emboldened by the stars’ announceme­nts. “I’m in!!” one user tweeted in response to Baron Cohen.

“Facebook is destroying minds, friendship­s, families, businesses. The false informatio­n that is being believed by previously rational people is destructiv­e beyond belief. It has to stop.”

But much of the rest of the reaction was divisive. “If you do not want to support @Facebook and its subsidiari­es you just have to stop using them, full stop,” one Twitter user wrote to Kardashian West.

Steyer said the Stop Hate for Profit campaign was also designed to encourage Facebook employees to raise the alarm about the company’s procedures.

“You’re starting to see employees of Facebook speaking out and whistleblo­wers within the company,” he said. “You want to look back at your career and say ‘I helped undermine American democracy?’ I hope not.”

 ?? Jenny Kane / Associated Press 2019 ??
Jenny Kane / Associated Press 2019
 ?? Willy Sanjuan / Associated Press ?? Kim Kardashian West, here at a panel in January, says she took a break from Instagram in protest.
Willy Sanjuan / Associated Press Kim Kardashian West, here at a panel in January, says she took a break from Instagram in protest.

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