| This link does not suggest that the owners of backpage were actively promoting child sex trafficking or selling children. The closest connection is about them automatically stripping suggestive words like "lolita" and "young" from online ads without blocking the advertisement. It's a bit of doublethink to suggest that removing suggestive words from an advertisement is facilitation. Where they got into more trouble was in the manual editing process. They moved from outright deleting all posts that offend to editing advertisements to remove 'sex for money' (not child sex) references because it was potentially driving their user base elsewhere and ultimately not effective in educating their usersabout what specifically in the post was not acceptable. So, greed, really. But the manual review process was not the same as the automatic removal of questionable phrases (such as the ones picked up by the media and politicians to further an agenda). Their moderators were not people actively seeking to enable the sale of children because the company would see increased advertising revenue. While they were greedy on the sex-for-money front, it's a huge unsupported leap to suggest actively enabling the sale of children. I'm sure if they saw some children for sale they would have acted appropriately. The same report that mentions the automatic filters advises that Backpage itself reports cases of suspected child exploitation to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and that in some months Backpage has transmitted hundreds of such reports to NCMEC. Which, of course, I am sure they are no longer sending these hundreds of reports per month since they were effectively shut down. Maybe there will be some other system with a moderation process that is likely to draw in and report offenders. But we'll probably kill that too. So, if the crime is facilitating prostitution, sure, they are guilty. Intent is clearly there. Knowingly facilitating child sex trafficking? No, the only indicator is automatic removal of phrases from posts. That's the fabrication extrapolated from scant evidence which was used to build support for encroaching legislation. The source of data for the hyperbolic claims of child sex trafficking was this 2017 Senate report if you'd like to review and make your own conclusions: https://www.hsgac.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Backpage%20Report... |