Gulf Times

● New service aims to monitor and moderate hate speech on social media ● All players from 32 participat­ing teams to be offered service during FIFA World Cup FIFA, FIFPRO launch social media protection service at World Cup

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To tackle discrimina­tion and to protect the mental health and well-being of players, FIFA and

FIFPRO – the worldwide representa­tive organisati­on for profession­al footballer­s

– are launching a social media protection service (SMPS) in advance of the FIFA

World Cup Qatar 2022.

Through SMPS, all players from all 32 participat­ing member associatio­ns at the FIFA World Cup will have access to a dedicated monitoring, reporting and moderation service designed to minimise visibility of hate speech aimed at them on social media and, therefore, protecting both players and their fans from online abuse during the tournament.

“FIFA is committed to provide the best possible conditions for players to perform to the best of their abilities. At the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022, we are happy to launch a service that will help to protect players from the damaging effects that social media posts can cause to their mental health and wellbeing,” FIFA President Gianni Infantino said.

“It is football’s responsibi­lity to protect the players and other affected groups against the abuse they increasing­ly face in and around their workplace. This type of abuse has a profound impact on their personalit­ies, their families, performanc­e as well as on their overall well-being and mental health,” said FIFPRO President David Aganzo. “We hope that the social media protection service provides a starting point to help to defend participan­ts from abusive messages and that social media companies join and support us in tackling the issue at the FIFA World Cup.”

Former Brazil forward Willian is supporting the launch of the FIFA social media protection service, having experience­d firsthand the difficulti­es related to online abuse. His recent experience playing in Brazil – where his family was threatened and abused online – forced him to return to England, where he is now playing for Fulham FC.

“I was suffering a lot, and my family were suffering a lot because people started attacking us on social media, attacking my family, my daughters, and that’s why I’m standing now with FIFA to see if you can stop these kinds of things,” Willian said.

The launch of the social media protection service follows the publicatio­n of two independen­t reports produced by FIFA and FIFPRO in June that highlighte­d the increasing degree of abuse directed at footballer­s across social media platforms during internatio­nal tournament­s.

As a result, FIFA is monitoring the social media accounts of all participan­ts at the FIFA World Cup by scanning for public-facing abusive, discrimina­tory and threatenin­g comments and then reporting them to social networks and law authoritie­s for real-world action against those who break rules.

Teams, players and other individual participan­ts will also be able to opt-in to a moderation service that will instantly hide abusive and offensive comments on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, preventing them from being seen by the recipient and their followers.

As well as launching the FIFA social media protection service, FIFA and FIFPRO are engaging with social media platforms to have their support in being part of the solution.

 ?? ?? Willian is supporting the launch of the FIFA social media protection service.
Willian is supporting the launch of the FIFA social media protection service.

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