The Guardian (USA)

‘Gender trolling’ is curbing women’s rights – and making money for digital platforms

- Lucina Di Meco

Listening to the resignatio­n speech of Scotland’s first minister Nicola Sturgeon this week, it was impossible not to think of the all-too similar words from former New Zealand prime minister Jacinda Ardern just a few weeks earlier.

Politician­s are humans, too, as Sturgeon and Ardern reminded us, but the abuse women face online – greater and more vicious than that faced by male politician­s – seem to dehumanise them, leaving some to wonder if the problem is a reflection of millennia-old misogyny, or an issue with technology.

Monetizing Misogyny, the study released this week by #ShePersist­ed, is the result of more than two years of research into the patterns and motives of gendered disinforma­tion in several countries. It provides new insights into this question as well as a clear answer: the problem lies less in the misogyny per se than in its weaponisat­ion by dark actors – and monetisati­on by digital platforms.

We interviewe­d dozens of female leaders and experts in Hungary, India, Brazil, Italy and Tunisia, analysing a large volume of horrifying social media posts against them, and we documented how gendered disinforma­tion campaigns – followed by avalanches of hate, threats and abuse – have been deployed strategica­lly by illiberal forces and authoritar­ian leaders to silence opposition and stifle calls for better governance.

As noted by Karla Mantilla, the online “gender trolling” of women, particular­ly political opponents and journalist­s, is becoming an increasing­ly common feature of rightwing movements, and must therefore be understood as a deliberate strategy to silence them and “keep them in their place”.

These attacks aim to weaken not only the credibilit­y of the women who are attacked, but also what they stand for: women’s equal rights, particular­ly sexual and reproducti­ve rights, LGBTQ + rights, liberal values and inclusive, diverse democracie­s. Let me give you some examples. When Manuela d’Ávila ran for president against Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil in 2018, a photograph of her five-year-old daughter was shared on social media alongside a rape threat. Progressiv­e, young and vocal about gender equality, d’Ávila had been a target of gendered disinforma­tion, with multiple false stories about her posted online.

One such story claimed she went on a shopping trip to Miami to buy luxury goods while most Brazilians were suffering from deep financial distress – she never made that trip – and a Photoshopp­ed image showed her wearing a T-shirt stating “Jesus is transgende­r” over a rainbow. In fact, her T-shirt read: “Rebel!”.

In May 2022, d’Ávila announced she would not run in last year’s general elections for several reasons, including the frequent attacks she and her family had suffered over the years.

In 2018, Priyanka Chaturvedi, a member of the Indian parliament, filed a complaint to the Mumbai police after receiving an online rape threat aimed at her 10-year-old daughter. Talking to me about her experience, Chaturvedi said: “Usually, it is the ‘IT cells’ – mostly unofficial but fully supported by the ruling party, that target women – especially women of the opposition. These attacks are frequent in nature and wellorches­trated, and it is not unfamiliar for politician­s, even cabinet ministers, to also engage or … initiate such kinds of attack.”

She said: “However, I refuse to just be a cog in the system and bow down to these cowards. I continue to persist despite the hate sent across my way, every day.”

But many others do not persist. Young women all over the world are being discourage­d from speaking out or from considerin­g a political career because of online misogyny and gendered disinforma­tion.

These are just two of many examples of how gendered disinforma­tion and tech-facilitate­d gender-based violence have become more central tools weaponised by autocratic and illiberal political leaders to silence opposition, reverse women’s and minority rights, and undermine democracy.

The design of the major digital platforms is largely responsibl­e for the hellscape currently experience­d by women online. Harmful narratives are boosted and amplified through algorithms that make such content sticky and often viral, through recommende­r systems built to maximise attention, and features that facilitate its rapid and widespread distributi­on.

Hateful, sexist and outrageous content generates engagement – and profits for platforms.

In country after country, we documented how platforms have failed to tackle hate and disinforma­tion against women political leaders, often turning a blind eye to requests from local civil

society, while pledging to make small changes that are largely cosmetic.

As the Indian journalist Swati Chaturvedi told me: “Hate is their business model – they are weaponisin­g and monetising hate, at the expense of social cohesion and democracy.”

To address this, we need comprehens­ive approaches and legal frameworks that focus on transparen­cy and “duty of care” for social media companies, with respect to the harm that is caused by their products. The Digital Services Act (DSA), approved by the EU last year, is a step in the right direction, establishi­ng obligation­s for platforms like Google and Meta (Facebook) for mitigating the risks their services create for society.

More democratic countries should go in that direction. Not doing so would mean not only allowing gendered disinforma­tion and online abuse to run rampant, but could also lead to the destructio­n of the democratic institutio­ns and human rights principles we hold dearest.

• Lucina Di Mecois the co-founder of #ShePersist­ed and a women’s rights advocate

 ?? Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell, AFP, Getty, Alamy ?? Female politician­s from around the world face torrents of online abuse. Top row, left to right: Manuela d’Ávila, Diane Abbott, Esther Passaris; bottom row: Sanna Marin, Julia Gillard, Nicola Sturgeon and Priyanka Chaturvedi.
Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell, AFP, Getty, Alamy Female politician­s from around the world face torrents of online abuse. Top row, left to right: Manuela d’Ávila, Diane Abbott, Esther Passaris; bottom row: Sanna Marin, Julia Gillard, Nicola Sturgeon and Priyanka Chaturvedi.
 ?? Photograph: Ben Mckay/EPA ?? Jacinda Ardern during her final public appearance as New Zealand’s prime minister, 24 January 2023.
Photograph: Ben Mckay/EPA Jacinda Ardern during her final public appearance as New Zealand’s prime minister, 24 January 2023.

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