Rachel Riley gives access to her DMs to highlight online abuse

Rachel Riley allowed the report access to her DMs. (Getty Images)
Rachel Riley allowed the report access to her DMs. (Getty Images)

Rachel Riley is among a number of celebrities calling for change following a new report suggesting Instagram is not doing enough to protect women in the public eye from misogynistic abuse online.

A study by the Centre for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), which included input from several women in the public eye such as actor Amber Heard and broadcaster Rachel Riley, suggests that Instagram was failing to remove accounts that sent abuse to women, in violation of the site’s rules.

The report saw five prominent women, including Riley, give access to their direct messages (DMs) on Instagram to the online safety group.

As well as Heard and Riley, Jamie Klingler, co-founder of Reclaim These Streets; journalist and mental health campaigner Bryony Gordon and Sharan Dhaliwal, founder of UK South Asian culture magazine Burnt Roti, also took part in the study.

The report claimed to have uncovered an “epidemic of misogynist abuse” that was being “ignored” by the platform as 90% of the offending accounts remained active after sending abusive content and being reported.

It said that threats of violence and abuse were being sent to women in voice notes as well as in text form and as images, with the CCDH suggesting that Instagram’s safety features were not effectively blocking out such content.

Read more: Thousands of women report feeling unsafe at night

Amber Heard was also involved in the report. (Getty Images)
Amber Heard was also involved in the report. (Getty Images)

Commenting on the findings Riley said: “For women in the public eye, receiving a constant stream of rude, inappropriate and even abusive messages to your DMs is unfortunately inevitable, and the fact that this happens away from public view makes it all the more intrusive.

"It worries me that younger and more vulnerable women and girls can be exposed to huge amounts of abuse without anyone knowing.

“Instagram and other platforms have a duty to keep the women who use their sites safe, but at the moment there isn’t enough being done to protect them.”

Watch: Culture Secretary: We will tackle online harms

In response to the report, Instagram said the CCDH had wrongly concluded that just because accounts had remained active it did not mean the platform had not taken action.

The social media company said that accounts that sent messages which break the site’s rules are given a strike and are blocked from sending DMs for a set period of time, with stronger punishments handed out if they continue to send abusive messages.

Instagram said it had a number of safety tools in place to protect against the type of content in question, including features that automatically block accounts that do not follow a user from directly contacting them via DM, as well as the Hidden Words tool which filters out messages to hide those containing offensive or abusive terms and emojis.

Read more: The words women want men to read to understand why they feel threatened

A new report has suggested more needs to be done to protect women online. (Getty Images)
A new report has suggested more needs to be done to protect women online. (Getty Images)

But CCDH chief executive Imran Ahmed said the current processes were not enough and Instagram needed to do more to protect women.

“Digital spaces provide increasingly important ways to maintain relationships, communicate and build personal brands. For women, however, the cost of admission to social media is misogynist abuse and threats sent by abusers with impunity,” he said.

“Instagram has chosen to side with abusers by negligently creating a culture in which abusers expect no consequences – denying women dignity and their ability to use digital spaces without harassment.

“There is an epidemic of misogynist abuse taking place in women’s DMs. Meta and Instagram must put the rights of women before profit.”

Read more: Cyberflashing to be criminalised under new online safety bill

A new report is calling for more action to protect women from hate online. (Getty Images)
A new report is calling for more action to protect women from hate online. (Getty Images)

In a statement, Cindy Southworth, Meta’s head of women’s safety, said: “While we disagree with many of the CCDH’s conclusions, we do agree that the harassment of women is unacceptable.

“That’s why we don’t allow gender-based hate or any threat of sexual violence, and last year we announced stronger protections for female public figures.

“Messages from people you don’t follow go to a separate request inbox where you can either block or report the sender, or you can turn off message requests altogether.

“Calls from people you don’t know only go through if you accept their message request and we offer a way to filter abusive messages so you never have to see them.”

Additional reporting PA.