Daily Mail

Wills in online safety plea as coroner gives damning ruling on Molly’s death

- By Jim Norton Technology Editor

PRINCE William warned last night that children’s safety online must not be an ‘afterthoug­ht’ following a landmark ruling that social media had contribute­d to a child’s death.

Molly Russell, 14, died from an ‘act of selfharm while suffering depression and the negative effects of online content’, a coroner concluded yesterday.

Internet safety campaigner­s and children’s charities said it was a ‘watershed’ moment that would ‘ send shockwaves through Silicon Valley’. The inquest had heard that the schoolgirl ‘binged’ on thousands of self-harm and suicide posts on Instagram and Pinterest in the months before her death.

Following the ruling, Molly’s father said if it wasn’t for the ‘ demented trail of life- sucking content’ online his daughter, who died in 2017, would ‘still be alive’.

Urging the Government to deliver the Online Safety Bill, he said: ‘It’s time to protect our innocent young people, instead of allowing platforms to prioritise their profits by monetising their misery.’

Responding to the findings, William, who has long campaigned for better protection of children online, tweeted: ‘No parent should ever have to endure what Ian Russell and his family have been through. They have been so incredibly brave. Online safety for our children and young people needs to be a prerequisi­te, not an afterthoug­ht.’

The Prince of Wales, who has previously met Molly’s parents, will now contact the family to see if he can help them in any way, royal aides said.

Senior Coroner Andrew Walker ruled that social media algorithms had recommende­d content that ‘romanticis­ed acts of self-harm’ and portrayed suicide as an ‘inevitable consequenc­e’.

‘The sites normalised her condition, focusing on a limited and irrational view without any counterbal­ance of normality,’ he said. Mr Walker concluded that the material viewed by vulnerable Molly, who was severely depressed, ‘affected her mental health in a negative way and contribute­d to her death in a more than minimal way’.

Following the verdict, Andy Burrows, head of child safety online policy at the NSPCC, said: ‘This is social media’s Big Tobacco moment.

‘For the first time globally it has been ruled content a child was allowed and even encouraged to see by tech companies contribute­d to their death. The world will be watching their response.’

At a press conference after the coroner delivered his conclusion, Mr Russell said: ‘Thank you, Molly, for being my daughter. Thank you.’

Describing Molly as a ‘thoughtful, sweet-natured, inquisitiv­e, selfless, beautiful individual,’ he said: ‘For Molly’s sake… let’s make the online world a place that prioritise­s the safety and wellbeing of young people over the money that can be made from them.’

Over the past fortnight, North London Coroner’s Court heard how Molly saw 2,100 posts related to depression, self-harm or suicide in the six months leading up to her death.

Giving evidence, Meta’s head of health and wellbeing Elizabeth Lagone said she believed the content, which Molly’s family say ‘ encouraged’ suicide, was safe.

The tech giant changed its policy in 2019 to ban all depictions of graphic self-harm and suicide.

Pinterest’s Judson Hoffman told the inquest the site was ‘not safe’ when Molly used it and they had made improvemen­ts to its safety since then.

Mr Russell said he hoped the findings will be an ‘important step in bringing about muchneeded change’ and called on Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg to ‘just listen… and then do something about it’.

He added: ‘For the first time today, tech platforms have been formally held responsibl­e for the death of a child.’

The Government’s Online Safety Bill, which is going through Parliament, will impose a duty of care on the biggest social media firms and search engines to protect users. Ofcom will act as regulator and have the power to hand out hefty fines of up to 10 per cent annual turnover – or even block sites from being used in the UK.

Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Secretary Michelle Donelan said the inquest had ‘shown the horrific failure of social media platforms to put the welfare of children first’.

Sir Peter Wanless, the NSPCC’s chief executive, said: ‘The ruling should send shockwaves through Silicon Valley – tech companies must expect to be held to account when they put the safety of children second to commercial decisions.’

The Children’s Commission­er Dame Rachel de Souza yesterday blasted social media giants following the verdict, telling them to ‘get a moral compass and step up’.

Meta said they would ‘carefully consider’ the coroner’s report, while Pinterest added it was ‘committed to making ongoing improvemen­ts’ to make the platform safe.

■ For help or support, visit samaritans. org or call the Samaritans for free on 116 123

‘Tech platforms held responsibl­e’

IT would be reassuring to think social media giants would locate their moral compass after being found responsibl­e for Molly Russell’s death, but we won’t hold our breath.

The vulnerable 14-year-old schoolgirl was bombarded with harrowing images glamorisin­g self-harm and suicide on sites such as Pinterest and Instagram.

A coroner pointed the finger of blame at the tech companies for giving a platform to pictures a ‘child shouldn’t see’. Yet five years since Molly died, the firms still aren’t doing enough to stop a repeat of the tragedy.

Yesterday, a Mail reporter posing as a teenager took seconds to uncover a torrent of gory material on TikTok.

Given that tech giants are so adept at tracking every aspect of their users’ lives for profit, it beggars belief that they can’t purge their sites of such pernicious filth.

Regulation cannot come soon enough. No more children should suffer Molly’s fate.

 ?? ?? Landmark verdict: Molly’s father Ian Russell
Landmark verdict: Molly’s father Ian Russell
 ?? ?? Vulnerable: Molly, 14, was exposed to harmful posts
Vulnerable: Molly, 14, was exposed to harmful posts

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