Daily Democrat (Woodland)

1 in 5 players at Women's World Cup abused online

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ZURICH, SWITZERLAN­D >> Players at the Women's World Cup were 29% more likely to receive online abuse than those at the men's tournament in 2022, said a report published on Monday.

One in five players (152) at the Women's World Cup received “targeted discrimina­tory, abusive or threatenin­g messaging,” according to FIFA and global players' associatio­n FIFPRO.

They released data from FIFA's Social Media Protection Service (SMPS), which tries to help shield players, teams and officials from online abuse and hate speech.

Almost 50% of “detected and verified” abusive messages were homophobic, sexual and sexist, SMPS added.

“The abuse that persists online impacts football players all over the world and it cannot be ignored. This toxic online environmen­t is a risky place to be in for players and it affects their mental health and wellbeing,” FIFPRO president David Aganzo said. “Football has a responsibi­lity to protect the players around their workspace.”

The SMPS was launched last year and has been used in eight FIFA tournament­s. It uses artificial intelligen­ce to try and prevent abuse on participan­ts' social media feeds.

The report analysed abusive content from all the major social media platforms during the Women's World Cup co-hosted by Australia and New Zealand in July and August. FIFA said 5.1 million posts and comments in 35 different languages were analysed. More than 400,000 comments were reported and hidden.

“There can be no place on social media for those who abuse or threaten anyone, be that in FIFA tournament­s or elsewhere,” FIFA president Gianni Infantino said. “Discrimina­tion has no place in football and no place in society.”

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