68% of EPL players endured Twitter abuse in 2021/2022 season’s first half

Eight per cent of the abuse were aimed at a protected characteristic, such as their race or gender.

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Around 68 per cent of English Premier League (EPL) footballers were subjected to abuse on Twitter in the first half of last season, according to a report.

Ofcom, which is a regulator, teamed up with The Alan Turing Institute — UK’s national institute for data science and artificial intelligence – to analyse more than 2.3 million tweets.

The tweets were sent to top-flight players during the first five months of the 2021/2022 campaign and they found that almost 60,000 were abusive.

Their finding revealed 418 of the 618 players analysed received at least one abusive tweet.

Eight per cent of the abuse were aimed at a protected characteristic, such as their race or gender.

Around half of the abusive messages were targeted at 12 specific players, who received on average 15 abusive tweets every day.

Manchester United players made up eight of the most top 10 abused players, with Cristiano Ronaldo and Harry Maguire receiving the most anti-social messages.

The study used new technology that can decipher whether tweets are abusive, while 3,000 random tweets were also manually reviewed.

Of those 3,000 tweets, over half were positive, 27 per cent were neutral, 12.5 per cent were critical and 3.5 per cent were abusive.

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Twitter was chosen due to its popularity with players, previous history of abuse and because it makes data available for research.

However, the Application Programming Interface (API) does not take into account the safeguards put in place.

Ofcom is preparing to regulate tech companies under new Online Safety laws, which will introduce rules for sites, apps, search engines and messaging platforms aimed at protecting users.

“These findings shed light on a dark side to the beautiful game,” Ofcom group director for broadcasting and online content Kevin Bakhurst said.

“Online abuse has no place in sports, nor in the wider society, and tackling it requires a team effort.

“Social media firms needn’t wait for new laws to make their sites and apps safer for users.

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“When we become the regulator for online safety, tech companies will have to be really open about the steps they’re taking to protect users.

“We will expect them to design their services with safety in mind.

Twitter, which says it did not receive any of the abusive tweets included in the report, is committed to eradicating abuse.

It recently conducted research using its own technology which found 38,000 abusive tweets were sent last season.

It also removed more than 38,000 abusive tweets.

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The social media company received fewer than 1,000 reports of abusive tweets from its reporting partner.

It is now focusing on reducing the burden on the victims by identifying abuse itself using its own technology and third-party safety tools.

 

(dpa/NAN)