Local users of the popular social l networking site ‘Facebook’ were appalled when attempts made by
them to report and block several pages and groups that promote sexual
violence, were not accepted by Facebook administrators.
The
disturbing trend of ‘rape pages’ on Facebook came into light when
several local Facebook users attempted to report and remove one such
‘closed’ group titled, ‘Kellanwa Rape karanna kamathi kollo’ (Boys who
like to rape girls) administered by a local user operating under profile
name Yoma Sly Croos (Tharuka).
Efforts to urge Facebook administrators
to remove the group by reporting the page have proven futile as such
attempts have been returned with a notification stating that the group
cannot be removed as it does not violate their ‘community standards’
pertaining to credible threat of violence, nudity or pornography.
Among
other such rackets carried out on social networking sites that promoted
sexual violence and sexually explicit content administered by local
users include groups or pages that enabled its members to share phone
numbers and offensive images of young Sri Lankan girls.
This is
however not the first instance where Facebook failed to contain
numerous networks of ‘cyber-anarchists’ who proliferate ‘rape pages’
that have in turn drawn in millions of users into such offensive groups .
In 2011, a petition signed by close to 200,000 people in Britain and
the US was directed at Facebook that urged the removal of a page named
"You know she's playing hard to get when you’re chasing her down an
alley". In spite of the continuous attempts however, similar offensive
pages have only burgeoned on the social networking site, indicating
disturbing signs of a new genre of violence and crimes.
When
inquired of possible action that can be taken against the administrators
of the page, the local law enforcement and other relevant authorities
said they were unable to clamp down on the proliferation of such
offensive activities on social networking sites.
“Facebook
maintains their own terms and conditions pertaining to freedom of speech
and the public right to expression. The free passage granted under such
clauses has been clearly exploited by some of the users when creating
offensive pages of this nature. Therefore, at present, none of the
categories included for reporting a page or a group on Facebook covers
the offences of this group. Therefore, we took action to write to
Facebook administrators concerning the group. We are presently awaiting a
response from them to determine the category on which users can report
such offensive pages,” Sri Lanka Computer Emergency Readiness Team |
Coordination Center (SLCERT|CC) spokesman Roshan Chandraguptha said.
Meanwhile,
Telecommunication and Information Technology Ministry Secretary H.M.
Gunasekara speaking acknowledged the present legal
framework was not equipped with the provisions to track or prosecute
individuals engaged in criminal activities on social networking sites.
“We
have received numerous complaints about various types of crimes that
are emerging within the social networking sites and we have presently
taken steps to inform the Defense Ministry concerning such activities,”
he said. “That is why we are presently drafting revisions to the
existing laws working in collaboration with the Attorney’s General’s
Department, the Defense Ministry, the Information Communications
Technology Agency and various telecom providers. Plans are underway to
pass and gazette the act that would authorize and equip the local law
enforcement agencies to take action against such activities.”