Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, has come under fire for flood Facebook and Instagram with advertisements promoting sexually obvious” AI girl” apps while together cracking down on information posted by people prostitutes.
Designed reports , that an investigation , has revealed that Meta’s social media platforms, including Facebook, Instagram, and Messenger, are now hosting hundreds of ads promoting sexually unambiguous” AI girl” programs. These advertisements feature computer-generated, vivid women in provocative poses and offer the opportunity to participate in role-playing and physical chats.
The digital women depicted are usually younger, characteristically sexual, and often portrayed in concerning circumstances, such as being locked in mediaeval stocks. The advertisements appear to be in violation of Meta’s unique guidelines for adult material, which forbid “depictions of individuals in obvious or suggestive positions, or activities that are excessively suggestive or sexually provocative.”
But, while these AI partner advertising proliferate, some mortal hookers complain that Meta badly polices their individual posts and accounts more harshly. Gemma Rose, director of the Pole Dance Stripper Movement, argues that if she posted related material, she would get “deleted in an instant”.
Brothels and advocates contend that Meta uses a double standard, allowing robot apps to advertise NSFW encounters while forbidding true women from doing the same. They point out that women have faced accounts suspensions and glad treatment for discussing sexual knowledge, enthusiasm, and their job.
Wired‘s survey of Meta’s ad library found at least 29, 000 ads for explicit AI “girlfriends”, 19, 000 using the term” NSFW”, and 14, 000 offering” NSFW AI”. Several of the apps advertised, which have been downloaded hundreds of thousands of times, feature very young- looking AI women and use tags like” #barelylegal” and” #teens”. Some even offer “nudifying” features to “undress” the AI girlfriends. These apps ‘ creators are largely unknown, and they did not respond to inquiries for comment.
When contacted by Wired, Meta stated that it reviewed and removed any ads that violated the law. However, thousands of such ads remained active days later. This exemplifies the paradox of Meta’s censorship, according to critics, which allows “scammy” AI apps to flourish while silencing real women.
Read more at Wired here.
For Breitbart News, Lucas Nolan is a reporter covering issues involving free speech and online censorship.