Yorkshire Post

Online giants unveil measures to make their sites safer for women

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FACEBOOK, GOOGLE, TikTok and Twitter have committed to improving their reporting systems and handing users more control over their experience as part of an initiative to tackle the abuse of women online.

It comes as hundreds of prominent women around the world, including current and former heads of state, have published an open letter urging the platforms to make their sites safer.

The four technology giants have made the commitment­s during the United Nations Generation Equality Forum in Paris. It comes after a year-long campaign led by the World Wide Web Foundation, which saw experts, government and women affected by online abuse come together to create solutions to the issue.

They focus on improving the features which will enable users to better manage who can engage with their posts and more options to filter certain types of content, as well as strengthen­ing reporting systems so users can track and manage reports of abuse.

The open letter, which recognises the pledges made by the tech giants and urges them to act upon them, has been signed by global leaders including Mozambican politician and women’s rights advocate Graca Machel, former Chilean president Michelle Bachelet, MPs Diane Abbott, Jess Phillips and Fleur Anderson, as well as other prominent women including Emma Watson, Annie Lennox, FKA Twigs, Thandiwe Newton, Gemma Chan and Maisie Williams.

The letter says the announceme­nt is a “historic opportunit­y” for the companies and calls on them to tackle “one of the biggest barriers to gender equality: the pandemic of online abuse against women and girls”.

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