Prince William demands social media firms improve their safety as he praises ‘incredibly brave’ family of Molly Russell after coroner ruled tech platforms contributed to the 14-year-old’s death
- The Prince of Wales has tonight warned that children’s safety online must not be an ‘afterthought’
- He praised Molly Russell’s ‘incredibly brave family’ following a landmark ruling on online safety today
- Senior coroner ruled that tech platforms contributed to the 14-year-old’s death in November 2017
- For help or support, visit samaritans.org or call Samaritans for free on 116 123
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The Prince of Wales has tonight warned that children’s safety online must not be an ‘afterthought’ and must improve their safety as he praised Molly Russell’s ‘incredibly brave family’ – after a senior coroner ruled that tech platforms contributed to the 14-year-old’s death.
Molly died in November 2017 after engaging with 2,100 depression, self-harm or suicide-related posts over a period of six months, an inquest at North London Coroner’s Court heard. Despite appearing a ‘normal, healthy girl’ flourishing at school, she was suffering from depression and vulnerable, the court was told.
Her family had argued that social media sites such as Pinterest and Instagram had recommended accounts or posts that ‘promoted’ suicide and self-harm.
Senior coroner Andrew Walker said the schoolgirl died while suffering from the ‘negative effects of online content’, adding that online material viewed by the teenager on sites such as Instagram and Pinterest ‘was not safe’ and ‘should not have been available for a 14-year-old child to see’.
In an unprecedented intervention tonight, King Charles III‘s son Prince William, the heir apparent, who met Molly’s father Ian Russell in November 2019, said on Twitter: ‘No parent should ever have to endure what Ian Russell and his family have been through.
‘They have been so incredibly brave. Online safety for our children and young people needs to be a prerequisite, not an afterthought.’
Mr Russell said he hoped the conclusion would be an ‘important step in bringing about much-needed change’ and asked Meta chief Mark Zuckerberg to ‘just listen… and then do something about it’. Welling up as he ended proceedings at a press conference in Barnet, north London today, Mr Russell’s voice broke as he said: ‘Thank you, Molly, for being my daughter. Thank you.’
Molly Russell accessed material from the ‘ghetto of the online world’ before her death in November 2017
The Prince of Wales has tonight warned that children’s safety online must not be an ‘afterthought’
The Prince and Princess of Wales met Molly’s father Ian Russell in November 2019
Molly’s father Ian (centre) slammed Facebook owner Meta for its ‘toxic corporate culture at the heart’ of the company
Concluding it would not be ‘safe’ to rule the cause of Molly’s death as suicide, Mr Walker said the teenager ‘died from an act of self-harm while suffering depression and the negative effects of online content’.
At North London Coroner’s Court, he said: ‘At the time that these sites were viewed by Molly, some of these sites were not safe as they allowed access to adult content that should not have been available for a 14-year-old child to see.
‘The way that the platforms operated meant that Molly had access to images, video clips and text concerning or concerned with self-harm, suicide or that were otherwise negative or depressing in nature.
‘The platform operated in such a way using algorithms as to result, in some circumstances, of binge periods of images, video clips and text – some of which were selected and provided without Molly requesting them.
‘These binge periods, if involving this content, are likely to have had a negative effect on Molly.’
Meta executive Elizabeth Lagone said she believed posts seen by Molly, which her family say ‘encouraged’ suicide, were safe.
Pinterest’s Judson Hoffman told the inquest the site was ‘not safe’ when Molly used it.
Speaking after the conclusion of the inquest, Mr Burrows said: ‘This is social media’s big tobacco moment. For the first time globally it has been ruled that content a child was allowed and encouraged to see by tech companies contributed to their death. The world will be watching their response.’
An Online Safety Bill amendment will be brought forward to help bereaved parents access information about social media companies, a peer said.
Baroness Beeban Kidron said she will table a change to the proposed legislation in the House of Lords after a coroner concluded content viewed on the internet contributed to the schoolgirl’s death.
Speaking at a press conference in Barnet after the conclusion of the inquest on Friday, crossbench peer Baroness Kidron said: ‘I think it was historic – nothing short of historic – the way that the conclusion was held.
‘And we do know, and I’m afraid my inbox in Parliament is full of people who have lost children sadly, and many of them struggle to get the information that they want, to get the access, to get that transparency.
‘And I will be bringing forward an amendment to the Online Safety Bill in the House of Lords that seeks to make it easier for bereaved parents to access information from social media companies.’
Speaking earlier on Friday, Molly’s father said: ‘We have heard a senior Meta executive describe this deadly stream of content the platform’s algorithms pushed to Molly as ‘safe’ and not contravening the platform’s policies.
‘If this demented trail of life-sucking content was safe, my daughter Molly would probably still be alive and instead of being a bereaved family of four, there would be five of us looking forward to a life full of purpose and promise that lay ahead for our adorable Molly.
‘It’s time the toxic corporate culture at the heart of the world’s biggest social media platform changed.
‘It’s time for the Government’s Online Safety Bill to urgently deliver its long-promised legislation.
‘It’s time to protect our innocent young people instead of allowing platforms to prioritise their profits by monetising their misery.’
A Meta spokeswoman said the company is ‘committed to ensuring that Instagram is a positive experience for everyone, particularly teenagers’ and will ‘carefully consider’ the coroner’s full report.
The ruling has been described as a global first of its kind after concluding that content Molly was allowed to view by tech companies contributed to her death.
Andy Burrows, head of child safety online policy at the NSPCC, said: ‘This is social media’s big tobacco moment.
‘For the first time globally, it has been ruled content a child was allowed and even encouraged to see by tech companies contributed to their death. The world will be watching their response.’
The family’s lawyer described Molly’s social media as a ‘ghetto’ due to the disturbing nature of many of the posts she had liked
Meta representative Liz Lagone (left) and Pinterest’s head of community operations, Judson Hoffman, gave evidence (right)
Digital Secretary Michelle Donelan said the inquest had ‘shown the horrific failure of social media platforms to put the welfare of children first.’
Shadow digital, culture, media and sport secretary Lucy Powell said it was a ‘scandal that just as the coroner is announcing that harmful social media content contributed to Molly Russell’s death, the Government is looking to water down the Online Safety Bill’.
Online safety campaigners at the children’s charity NSPCC said Molly died after suffering from ‘negative effects of online content’ and it should ‘send shockwaves through Silicon Valley’.
Out of 16,300 posts that Molly saved, shared or liked on Instagram in the six months before her death, 2,100 were related to depression, self-harm or suicide, the inquest was told.
The court was played 17 clips the teenager viewed on the site – prompting ‘the greatest of warning’ from the coroner.
The inquest also heard details of emails sent to Molly by Pinterest, with headings such as ’10 depression pins you might like’ and ‘new ideas for you in depression’.
Continuing his conclusions, Mr Walker said: ‘Other content sought to isolate and discourage discussion with those who may have been able to help.
‘In some cases, the content was particularly graphic, tending to portray self-harm and suicide as an inevitable consequence of a condition that could not be recovered from.
‘The sites normalised her condition, focusing on a limited and irrational view without any counterbalance of normality.
‘It is likely that the above material viewed by Molly, already suffering with a depressive illness and vulnerable due to her age, affected her mental health in a negative way and contributed to her death in a more than minimal way.’
The coroner said on Thursday that he intends to issue a Prevention of Future Deaths (PFD) notice, which will recommend action on how to stop a repeat of the Molly Russell case.
The Russell family’s lawyer, Oliver Sanders KC, asked the coroner to send the PFD to Instagram, Pinterest, media regulator Ofcom and the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport.
A spokeswoman for Meta said in a statement following the conclusion that the company is ‘committed to ensuring that Instagram is a positive experience for everyone, particularly teenagers’ and would ‘carefully consider the coroner’s full report when he provides it’.
For help or support, visit samaritans.org or call Samaritans for free on 116 123
Source: Daily Mail