Yorkshire Post

Rachel Riley urges action over unsolicite­d online sexual content

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RACHEL RILEY has said unsolicite­d sexual content being sent to people online should be treated the same as if it had happened in the street.

The 36-year-old Countdown star, inset, revealed that when the Centre for Countering Digital Hate went through her Instagram direct messages, as she does not look at them, the charity found a stream of inappropri­ate sexual videos, including 30 sent by one man. Speaking on the Dirty Mother Pukka podcast, Riley questioned why social media giants do not use advanced photo detection technology to detect unsolicite­d sexual images.

She said: “They gave me the details of some of the things he was saying. “It’s not that I’m upset that I’ve got it, it’s thinking that my friends, teenage girls, are on this platform. Especially DMs (direct messages) because no one else can see it.

“I’ve had a lot of trolling on Twitter from activism stuff, antiSemiti­sm stuff. The thing about being trolled is that you’re the only one that really sees all of it, and no one can understand what it’s like to have that level of trolling and that many people saying things or sending you things, it’s very lonely.

“To think there are teenage girls at one of the most vulnerable times in your life, we know teenage girls are really susceptibl­e to external opinions and pressures.”

The mathematic­ian and TV presenter questioned why social media platforms do not employ technology which can describe an image for visually impaired people to prevent users from receiving unwanted sexual content from people they do not follow.

She added: “Cyber flashing is literally just being made a crime.

“There’s no reason why doing something online shouldn’t be treated in exactly the same way as if you did it in the street.”

Riley also recalled a time she was upskirted – when someone takes a picture under another person’s clothing without their permission – at a friend’s house party while playing table tennis with her profession­al dancer husband Pasha Kovalev.

She said she was “too polite” to call out the inappropri­ate behaviour as she was unable to “digest” or think about it at the time.

However, she feels that if someone tried to do it to her again she should break their phone, and if they had an issue with that she would take the incident to police so it could be dealt with in public.

The full interview with Rachel Riley on the Dirty Mother Pukka podcast with Anna Whitehouse and Polly Hazlewood is available on the Global player.

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