Technology
Facebook and Instagram threatened with BAN from iPhone after secret slave market uncovered on apps
APPLE threatened to ban Facebook from the iPhone after an investigation found that its apps were used for human trafficking.
The discovery led to warnings from Apple that it would remove Facebook and Instagram from the App Store unless it stamped out the practice.
Apple threatened to ban Facebook and Instagram from the App Store in 2019 after an investigation found that human traffickers were selling victims on the apps
APFacebook reportedly knew about the trafficking ring for months but did not take associated posts or accounts down[/caption]
The fracas began in 2019 after the BBC reported that human traffickers in the Middle East were using Facebook apps to arrange sales of victims.
Hashtags used by users in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait featured adverts for the illegal buying and selling of domestic slaves against their will.
Women were sold for a few thousand dollars each, categorised by race and deprived of their basic human rights. They were unable to leave.
In response to the investigation, Apple told Facebook that it would ban its products unless action was taken.
The threat was recently unearthed in internal Facebook documents seen by the Wall Street Journal.
The documents show that Facebook knew about and had been investigating human trafficking rings on its apps since before the BBC report.
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According to the Journal, Facebook took limited action to take down the offending posts and accounts until Apple issued its threat.
A Facebook researcher wrote in a report dated 2019, “was this issue known to Facebook before BBC inquiry and Apple escalation?”.
The next paragraph begins: “Yes.”
A document from earlier this year suggested that Facebook should use a light touch with Arabic language warnings about human trafficking.
The file suggested that warnings should avoid “alienating buyers” – meaning purchasers of domestic workers on Facebook’s products.
Often, those contracts put people in situations akin to slavery, according to the Journal.
A Facebook spokesperson said the company prohibits human exploitation “in no uncertain terms”.
They said that Facebook has been “combating human trafficking on our platform for many years”.
They added: “Our goal remains to prevent anyone who seeks to exploit others from having a home on our platform.”
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