Blame the Messenger

Child exploitation is rampant online, and Facebook’s chat platform is a big part of the problem

Damon Beres
OneZero

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A photo of the Messenger logo on a smartphone with a chip background.
Photo: SOPA Images/Getty Images

FFacebook is many things: a social network; a conglomeration of multimedia publishing apps; and now, the world has learned, perhaps the largest mainstream distributor of videos and pictures in which children are sexually abused.

The New York Times on Saturday published a feature detailing an “explosion” in the online distribution of this kind of content, noting that Facebook’s Messenger app in particular was last year “responsible for nearly 12 million of the 18.4 million worldwide reports of child sexual abuse material.” This report, authored by journalists Michael H. Keller and Gabriel J.X. Dance, mentions encryption 13 times, often in reference to Messenger. Facebook said earlier this year it plans to roll out end-to-end encryption on this platform by default, which will make it much harder to detect and stop the proliferation of problematic material of any kind, including footage and images of children being sexually exploited.

For all the references to encryption, the Times story doesn’t go into much detail as to why it actually matters. Essentially, end-to-end encryption makes it impossible for an intervening force, like a government or Facebook itself, to see what people are sending one another…

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Damon Beres
OneZero

Co-Founder and Former Editor in Chief, OneZero at Medium