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  • 2019-04-24 (xsd:date)
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  • Is a Sex-Trafficking Ring Adding Girls on Snapchat to Easily Locate, Kidnap Them? (en)
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  • In late April 2019, a hoax spread on Facebook alleging that a sex-trafficking ring was attempting to locate unwitting girls on another social platform, Snapchat. Police and Snapchat both confirmed the rumor to be unfounded. Real instances of human trafficking are of true concern, with an estimated 40 million people forced into labor and exploitation worldwide. Nevertheless, the topic of sex trafficking has also been the focus of multiple viral internet hoaxes and scarelore. The most recent iteration of a trafficking-themed hoax started with a 23 April 2019 Facebook post that stated the ring was targeting people in Lawrence, Mass. The claim was that the criminal ring could use Snapchat to locate unwitting girls, kidnap them and sweep them into the sex-trafficking operation. It was shared thousands of times and includes images of what appear to be people's Snapchat profiles. The post reads: Police did in fact weigh in on 24 April 2019 to debunk the claim that a sex-trafficking ring was leveraging Snapchat to capture girls. Using official social media channels, Lawrence police stated that, The LPD has been made aware of a social media scam referring to sex trafficking. There is no substance to this matter. As always the public should use caution when responding to, or clicking on posts from individuals they do not recognize. Snapchat also stated that the allegation appears to be a case of disinformation. The hoax appeared to exploit a lack of understanding about how Snapchat works. Namely, users' locations are not shared unless they opt to do so, and even then, their locations are only revealed to friends they have selected to share them with. In other words, even if a Snapchat user opted to add a stranger as a contact, the user would have to actively choose in the platform to share a location with that stranger. (The company advises users against adding people they don't know.) Perhaps because they constitute an overlap of the salacious and the frightening, sex-trafficking-ring internet hoaxes are regular occurrences. In August 2018, social media users circulated an unfounded claim that text messages containing the phrase a friend has complimented you in IRL were linked to sex trafficking. In February 2019, a woman took to Facebook to falsely report that a mix-up resulting in her getting into the car of the wrong Uber driver involved the threat of sex trafficking. Police stated that was not the case. Social media users on all platforms can employ basic safety measures to keep certain information that might leave them vulnerable to crime out of public view. For example, users can avoid posting their locations with strangers, manage privacy settings and only allow people they know into their networks. (en)
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