Problematizing content moderation by social media platforms and its impact on digital harm reduction

被引:0
|
作者
Gomes, Andre Belchior [1 ]
Sultan, Aysel [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Release Legal Emergency & Drugs Serv, London, England
[2] Tech Univ Munich, Munich, Germany
[3] Monash Univ, Melbourne, Australia
关键词
Digital drug markets; Harm reduction; Illicit drugs; Instagram; Social media; TikTok; HISTORY; DRUGS;
D O I
10.1186/s12954-024-01104-9
中图分类号
R194 [卫生标准、卫生检查、医药管理];
学科分类号
摘要
Recent years have marked a shift in selling and buying illicit psychoactive drugs from darknet cryptomarkets to publicly accessible social media and messaging platforms. As more users turn to procuring drugs this way, the role of digital harm reduction has become particularly urgent. However, one of the main obstacles complicating the implementation of digital harm reduction is the increasingly automated content moderation by the social media platforms. While some platforms are less restrictive about harm reduction content (e.g., TikTok), others implement higher degrees of moderation, including the removal of individual content and banning of entire profile pages (e.g., Instagram). This article discusses community guidelines of five popular social media and messaging platforms and their content moderation tools. It aims to highlight how these guidelines may be inadvertently curbing the dissemination of harm reduction and health promotion materials, and erroneously interpreting it as a promotion of drug use and sales. The discussion concludes that digital harm reduction requires transdisciplinary collaboration of professional organizations, researchers, and social media platforms to ensure reliable implementation of digital harm reduction, and help build safer digital communities.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Optimal social media content moderation and platform immunities
    Frank Fagan
    European Journal of Law and Economics, 2020, 50 : 437 - 449
  • [32] Behind the Screen: Content Moderation in the Shadows of Social Media
    Sobande, Francesca
    CONVERGENCE-THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RESEARCH INTO NEW MEDIA TECHNOLOGIES, 2020, 26 (04): : 1025 - 1027
  • [33] Behind the Screen: Content Moderation in the Shadows of Social Media
    Kovalyova, Natalia
    INFORMATION & CULTURE, 2020, 55 (01): : 98 - 100
  • [34] Optimal social media content moderation and platform immunities
    Fagan, Frank
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF LAW AND ECONOMICS, 2020, 50 (03) : 437 - 449
  • [35] Behind the screen: content moderation in the shadows of social media
    Quandt, Thorsten
    DIGITAL JOURNALISM, 2020, 8 (07) : 968 - 969
  • [36] Commercial Versus Volunteer: Comparing User Perceptions of Toxicity and Transparency in Content Moderation Across Social Media Platforms
    Cook, Christine L.
    Patel, Aashka
    Wohn, Donghee Yvette
    FRONTIERS IN HUMAN DYNAMICS, 2021, 3
  • [37] The emerging science of content labeling: Contextualizing social media content moderation
    Morrow, Garrett
    Swire-Thompson, Briony
    Polny, Jessica Montgomery
    Kopec, Matthew
    Wihbey, John P.
    JOURNAL OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR INFORMATION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2022, 73 (10) : 1365 - 1386
  • [38] Digital Platforms' Practices on Content Moderation: Substantive and Procedural Issues Proposed by DSA
    Filatova-Bilous, Nataliia
    Tsuvina, Tetiana
    Karnaukh, Bohdan
    INTEGRATED COMPUTER TECHNOLOGIES IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING-2023, VOL 2, ICTM 2023, 2024, 996 : 196 - 207
  • [40] Toxic Speech and Limited Demand for Content Moderation on Social Media
    Pradel, Franziska
    Zilinsky, Jan
    Kosmidis, Spyros
    Theocharis, Yannis
    AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW, 2024, 118 (04) : 1895 - 1912