Ugly Hedgehog - Photography Forum
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
The Attic
Facebook allows human smugglers to use its platform
Feb 2, 2022 07:58:10   #
Rose42
 
Facebook says it doesn’t allow human exploitation. But smugglers are using the platform to offer migrants illegal passage across the southern U.S. border.

Facebook is allowing human smugglers to use its platform to offer migrants illegal passage across the southern U.S. border, and in some cases Facebook’s algorithm is actually recommending smuggler pages to users, according to a Tech T***sparency Project (TTP) investigation that underscores the company's deep problems policing content violations.

NBC News reported on April 5 about human smugglers who advertise their services on Facebook, feeding false hope to Central American migrants that they will have an easy time crossing the border. The U.S. is currently facing its biggest migrant surge in 20 years, according to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, and many migrants arrive badly misinformed about the Biden administration’s immigration policies and their ability to enter the U.S.

In response to NBC's report, a Facebook spokesperson said the company bans human exploitation and trafficking and takes down such content when f**gged by users. Facebook has been warned for years about this problem, with numerous reports detailing how smugglers use Facebook to lure migrants from Africa and the Middle East into dangerous sea crossings to Europe.

But TTP’s investigation provides fresh evidence that Facebook continues to be a hub for human smuggling operations. The research identified dozens of Facebook pages offering passage across the U.S. southern border, simply by searching the site for basic Spanish phrases such as “viajar a estados Unidos” (“travel to the United States”) and “cruzando a estados Unidos” (“cross to the United States”).

In most cases, the pages didn’t bother to disguise their intentions. One page created on March 4 called “Cruze frontera a EUA” (“Cross border to USA”) had a single word descriptor for its profile: “coyotes,” the widely used term for human smugglers.

Here are key findings from the investigation:

TTP’s research found a total of 50 Facebook pages offering illegal border crossings, in nearly all cases making their services explicit in the page name. More than half of the pages—35—were created since last fall, and a dozen have popped up in the last month, operating freely with no enforcement from Facebook.



The problem is compounded by Facebook’s algorithms and automated features. TTP found that Facebook’s recommendation system often suggests additional pages that offer border crossings, directing users to other dubious, and potentially dangerous, smuggling services.



At the same time, Facebook’s pop-up messenger window provides an easy way for people to privately contact the administrator of a smuggler page (complete with pre-set suggested questions), facilitating communication between would-be migrants and human traffickers. Human smuggling pages like the one below frequently request that users communicate through WhatsApp or direct messaging.



Human smugglers have also used categories like "Travel Company" and "Product/Service" to classify their pages. Facebook allows people to select up to three categories for their pages, a tool the company says makes it “easier for potential customers to find you” through search and algorithmic recommendations on the platform.

Some of these Facebook pages offer detailed descriptions of the travel arrangements they offer as well as the cost of passage for a single person, typically in the thousands of dollars. Others simply post cryptic images of buses with American f**g emojis indicating the United States as the final destination and wait for users to express interest.



Facebook groups are also becoming a vehicle for smugglers to offer their services. One group created on November 16, 2020, called “EMIGRANTE DE VARIOS PAISES EN MÉXICO” (“Immigrants from several countries in Mexico”) had amassed over 230,000 members as of April 7. While the commentary in the group covers a variety of a topics, smugglers make frequent appearances, posting offers of passage to the U.S.
Slideshow:




One private Facebook group called “Cruzes Seguros official” (“Official safe crossing”), which was created on March 24, 2021, gained 484 members in nearly two weeks. The group gives its location as Las Vegas, Nevada. One of the group’s administrators advertised services in his profile: “QUIERES CRUZAR MANDAME MSJS POR INBOX” (“DO YOU WANT TO CROSS SEND ME MSJS BY INBOX”). The admin posts in the group about upcoming opportunities to buy passage to the U.S.; the group’s comments section is disabled, forcing interested parties to communicate privately through Messenger.
Slideshow:




On a Facebook page called “Camino De Todos Los Migrante Hacia Estados Unidos” (“All Migrant's Path to the United States”), a user tagged the Honduran authorities in an effort to alert them to illegal smuggling activity. The page, which was created in 2018, has nearly 4,000 followers. It is unclear if the authorities took action, but the page remained active on Facebook as of April 7.



The evidence gathered by TTP is likely only a snapshot of the human smuggling activity taking place on Facebook. But it paints a troubling picture of a company that is failing to enforce its stated policies amid the migrant surge at the U.S. southern border.

Facebook's community standards ban content "that offers or assists in smuggling of humans," and the company has touted its efforts to remove content that "facilitates or coordinates the exploitation of humans.” TTP’s research, however, shows Facebook continues to leave major holes in its enforcement, providing ample opportunity for human smugglers to exploit the platform’s tools.

https://www.techt***sparencyproject.org/articles/facebook-teems-human-smugglers-luring-migrants

Reply
Feb 2, 2022 08:03:16   #
thom w Loc: San Jose, CA
 
Rose42 wrote:
Facebook says it doesn’t allow human exploitation. But smugglers are using the platform to offer migrants illegal passage across the southern U.S. border.

Facebook is allowing human smugglers to use its platform to offer migrants illegal passage across the southern U.S. border, and in some cases Facebook’s algorithm is actually recommending smuggler pages to users, according to a Tech T***sparency Project (TTP) investigation that underscores the company's deep problems policing content violations.

NBC News reported on April 5 about human smugglers who advertise their services on Facebook, feeding false hope to Central American migrants that they will have an easy time crossing the border. The U.S. is currently facing its biggest migrant surge in 20 years, according to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, and many migrants arrive badly misinformed about the Biden administration’s immigration policies and their ability to enter the U.S.

In response to NBC's report, a Facebook spokesperson said the company bans human exploitation and trafficking and takes down such content when f**gged by users. Facebook has been warned for years about this problem, with numerous reports detailing how smugglers use Facebook to lure migrants from Africa and the Middle East into dangerous sea crossings to Europe.

But TTP’s investigation provides fresh evidence that Facebook continues to be a hub for human smuggling operations. The research identified dozens of Facebook pages offering passage across the U.S. southern border, simply by searching the site for basic Spanish phrases such as “viajar a estados Unidos” (“travel to the United States”) and “cruzando a estados Unidos” (“cross to the United States”).

In most cases, the pages didn’t bother to disguise their intentions. One page created on March 4 called “Cruze frontera a EUA” (“Cross border to USA”) had a single word descriptor for its profile: “coyotes,” the widely used term for human smugglers.

Here are key findings from the investigation:

TTP’s research found a total of 50 Facebook pages offering illegal border crossings, in nearly all cases making their services explicit in the page name. More than half of the pages—35—were created since last fall, and a dozen have popped up in the last month, operating freely with no enforcement from Facebook.



The problem is compounded by Facebook’s algorithms and automated features. TTP found that Facebook’s recommendation system often suggests additional pages that offer border crossings, directing users to other dubious, and potentially dangerous, smuggling services.



At the same time, Facebook’s pop-up messenger window provides an easy way for people to privately contact the administrator of a smuggler page (complete with pre-set suggested questions), facilitating communication between would-be migrants and human traffickers. Human smuggling pages like the one below frequently request that users communicate through WhatsApp or direct messaging.



Human smugglers have also used categories like "Travel Company" and "Product/Service" to classify their pages. Facebook allows people to select up to three categories for their pages, a tool the company says makes it “easier for potential customers to find you” through search and algorithmic recommendations on the platform.

Some of these Facebook pages offer detailed descriptions of the travel arrangements they offer as well as the cost of passage for a single person, typically in the thousands of dollars. Others simply post cryptic images of buses with American f**g emojis indicating the United States as the final destination and wait for users to express interest.



Facebook groups are also becoming a vehicle for smugglers to offer their services. One group created on November 16, 2020, called “EMIGRANTE DE VARIOS PAISES EN MÉXICO” (“Immigrants from several countries in Mexico”) had amassed over 230,000 members as of April 7. While the commentary in the group covers a variety of a topics, smugglers make frequent appearances, posting offers of passage to the U.S.
Slideshow:




One private Facebook group called “Cruzes Seguros official” (“Official safe crossing”), which was created on March 24, 2021, gained 484 members in nearly two weeks. The group gives its location as Las Vegas, Nevada. One of the group’s administrators advertised services in his profile: “QUIERES CRUZAR MANDAME MSJS POR INBOX” (“DO YOU WANT TO CROSS SEND ME MSJS BY INBOX”). The admin posts in the group about upcoming opportunities to buy passage to the U.S.; the group’s comments section is disabled, forcing interested parties to communicate privately through Messenger.
Slideshow:




On a Facebook page called “Camino De Todos Los Migrante Hacia Estados Unidos” (“All Migrant's Path to the United States”), a user tagged the Honduran authorities in an effort to alert them to illegal smuggling activity. The page, which was created in 2018, has nearly 4,000 followers. It is unclear if the authorities took action, but the page remained active on Facebook as of April 7.



The evidence gathered by TTP is likely only a snapshot of the human smuggling activity taking place on Facebook. But it paints a troubling picture of a company that is failing to enforce its stated policies amid the migrant surge at the U.S. southern border.

Facebook's community standards ban content "that offers or assists in smuggling of humans," and the company has touted its efforts to remove content that "facilitates or coordinates the exploitation of humans.” TTP’s research, however, shows Facebook continues to leave major holes in its enforcement, providing ample opportunity for human smugglers to exploit the platform’s tools.

https://www.techt***sparencyproject.org/articles/facebook-teems-human-smugglers-luring-migrants
Facebook says it doesn’t allow human exploitation.... (show quote)


Do you have an account? (it's an honest question and I'm not guessing that you do or don't)

Reply
Feb 2, 2022 08:04:33   #
Rose42
 
thom w wrote:
Do you have an account? (it's an honest question and I'm not guessing that you do or don't)


Irrelevant.

Reply
 
 
Feb 2, 2022 08:05:18   #
idaholover Loc: Nampa ID
 
Rose42 wrote:
Facebook says it doesn’t allow human exploitation. But smugglers are using the platform to offer migrants illegal passage across the southern U.S. border.

Facebook is allowing human smugglers to use its platform to offer migrants illegal passage across the southern U.S. border, and in some cases Facebook’s algorithm is actually recommending smuggler pages to users, according to a Tech T***sparency Project (TTP) investigation that underscores the company's deep problems policing content violations.

NBC News reported on April 5 about human smugglers who advertise their services on Facebook, feeding false hope to Central American migrants that they will have an easy time crossing the border. The U.S. is currently facing its biggest migrant surge in 20 years, according to Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, and many migrants arrive badly misinformed about the Biden administration’s immigration policies and their ability to enter the U.S.

In response to NBC's report, a Facebook spokesperson said the company bans human exploitation and trafficking and takes down such content when f**gged by users. Facebook has been warned for years about this problem, with numerous reports detailing how smugglers use Facebook to lure migrants from Africa and the Middle East into dangerous sea crossings to Europe.

But TTP’s investigation provides fresh evidence that Facebook continues to be a hub for human smuggling operations. The research identified dozens of Facebook pages offering passage across the U.S. southern border, simply by searching the site for basic Spanish phrases such as “viajar a estados Unidos” (“travel to the United States”) and “cruzando a estados Unidos” (“cross to the United States”).

In most cases, the pages didn’t bother to disguise their intentions. One page created on March 4 called “Cruze frontera a EUA” (“Cross border to USA”) had a single word descriptor for its profile: “coyotes,” the widely used term for human smugglers.

Here are key findings from the investigation:

TTP’s research found a total of 50 Facebook pages offering illegal border crossings, in nearly all cases making their services explicit in the page name. More than half of the pages—35—were created since last fall, and a dozen have popped up in the last month, operating freely with no enforcement from Facebook.



The problem is compounded by Facebook’s algorithms and automated features. TTP found that Facebook’s recommendation system often suggests additional pages that offer border crossings, directing users to other dubious, and potentially dangerous, smuggling services.



At the same time, Facebook’s pop-up messenger window provides an easy way for people to privately contact the administrator of a smuggler page (complete with pre-set suggested questions), facilitating communication between would-be migrants and human traffickers. Human smuggling pages like the one below frequently request that users communicate through WhatsApp or direct messaging.



Human smugglers have also used categories like "Travel Company" and "Product/Service" to classify their pages. Facebook allows people to select up to three categories for their pages, a tool the company says makes it “easier for potential customers to find you” through search and algorithmic recommendations on the platform.

Some of these Facebook pages offer detailed descriptions of the travel arrangements they offer as well as the cost of passage for a single person, typically in the thousands of dollars. Others simply post cryptic images of buses with American f**g emojis indicating the United States as the final destination and wait for users to express interest.



Facebook groups are also becoming a vehicle for smugglers to offer their services. One group created on November 16, 2020, called “EMIGRANTE DE VARIOS PAISES EN MÉXICO” (“Immigrants from several countries in Mexico”) had amassed over 230,000 members as of April 7. While the commentary in the group covers a variety of a topics, smugglers make frequent appearances, posting offers of passage to the U.S.
Slideshow:




One private Facebook group called “Cruzes Seguros official” (“Official safe crossing”), which was created on March 24, 2021, gained 484 members in nearly two weeks. The group gives its location as Las Vegas, Nevada. One of the group’s administrators advertised services in his profile: “QUIERES CRUZAR MANDAME MSJS POR INBOX” (“DO YOU WANT TO CROSS SEND ME MSJS BY INBOX”). The admin posts in the group about upcoming opportunities to buy passage to the U.S.; the group’s comments section is disabled, forcing interested parties to communicate privately through Messenger.
Slideshow:




On a Facebook page called “Camino De Todos Los Migrante Hacia Estados Unidos” (“All Migrant's Path to the United States”), a user tagged the Honduran authorities in an effort to alert them to illegal smuggling activity. The page, which was created in 2018, has nearly 4,000 followers. It is unclear if the authorities took action, but the page remained active on Facebook as of April 7.



The evidence gathered by TTP is likely only a snapshot of the human smuggling activity taking place on Facebook. But it paints a troubling picture of a company that is failing to enforce its stated policies amid the migrant surge at the U.S. southern border.

Facebook's community standards ban content "that offers or assists in smuggling of humans," and the company has touted its efforts to remove content that "facilitates or coordinates the exploitation of humans.” TTP’s research, however, shows Facebook continues to leave major holes in its enforcement, providing ample opportunity for human smugglers to exploit the platform’s tools.

https://www.techt***sparencyproject.org/articles/facebook-teems-human-smugglers-luring-migrants
Facebook says it doesn’t allow human exploitation.... (show quote)


Anyone who has an account with Twitter or FB is enabling their tyrannical/evil power.

Reply
Feb 2, 2022 08:05:42   #
idaholover Loc: Nampa ID
 
Rose42 wrote:
Irrelevant.


Ah, no it isn't!

Reply
Feb 2, 2022 08:19:09   #
thom w Loc: San Jose, CA
 
Rose42 wrote:
Irrelevant.


Possibly, and you obviously aren't required to answer, but it seemed like an innocent enough question. I suppose there could be various reasons to not want anyone to know, so I will reserve judgement.

Reply
Feb 2, 2022 09:07:40   #
Rose42
 
thom w wrote:
Possibly, and you obviously aren't required to answer, but it seemed like an innocent enough question. I suppose there could be various reasons to not want anyone to know, so I will reserve judgement.


What do you mean ‘possibly’? Yes it is irrelevant and no I don’t use it.

Reply
 
 
Feb 2, 2022 09:08:41   #
Rose42
 
idaholover wrote:
Anyone who has an account with Twitter or FB is enabling their tyrannical/evil power.


Uh huh. There are many directions to go from there on what people ‘support’ but I won’t.

Reply
Feb 3, 2022 12:57:04   #
dlwhawaii Loc: Sunny Wailuku, Hawaii
 
Zuckerberg is just a very rich POS. Name change notwithstanding Meta is STILL Facebook.

Reply
Feb 3, 2022 13:17:24   #
DennyT Loc: Central Missouri woods
 
Rose42 wrote:
Irrelevant.


Facebook has 2.9 billion user. 50 pages out of that number is a pretty good batting average I would say . Yet some persist in stereotyping the whole business based on that .
As much as I dislike all social media that’s not fair.

Reply
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
The Attic
UglyHedgehog.com - Forum
Copyright 2011-2024 Ugly Hedgehog, Inc.