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Instagram 'Error' Turned Reels into Scroll of Murder, Gore, and Violence

cossatot

This seems to have happened on 26 Feb 2023 as well: https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2023/02/26/instage...

whycome

The date must be cursed? Is there anything weird about the numbers? Y2K, 2038, and 0226?

drcongo

Weirdly close date too.

wruza

That’s one of the reasons I watched these before, just to know what the world can be and to not lose sleep over it when accidentally exposed. We are living in a very thin layer of normalness under which is the abyss of murder, gore and violence. And sometimes this normalness was based/achieved through it. Ignoring it is in my opinion partially the source of the world’s problems. Because “X is poor and underdeveloped” and “A is at war with B” sounds less problematic and more abstract than a pile of dead bodies or someone lying on the road without a face, right before your eyes.

wkat4242

Why is this content on the servers after being moderated??

micromacrofoot

it's not moderated off the platform, just given sensitive content warnings — this content is all over instagram if you look for it

wkat4242

Ugh. I didn't know that. They should moderate that away.

I have no issue with erotic content at all (for which they do actually ban people!) but all this cruelty and violence has no place there.

bathtub365

All Meta cares about is engagement and they have a history of turning a blind eye to all kinds of bad behaviour across all of their platforms. The only way that changes is if it loses them money, which it clearly doesn’t. It’s highly unlikely that they’ll change so it may be worth reconsidering continuing to support a company that clearly doesn’t share your values and enables and monetizes the posting of horrific content.

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whalesalad

I was wondering why virtually every single reel last night was people in a fist fight. Men versus men, women versus women, people getting concussed in a parking lot. Guess it wasn't just a coincidence.

ge96

There is something grounding about seeing gore, it doesn't feel real. My own opinion of life, living in a state of "this, then this, then this" not really in the moment. We forget about how fragile our bodies are. It's better not to be in fear of bad things like accidents/murder but yeah still good to keep in mind how life isn't so bad. When you see cartel videos for example damn. It's that thing out of sight out of mind.

Edit: makes me think of gated communities too keep the bad out. I'm not an anti-rich person but yeah good to have empathy. There's also so many people in the world can't help em all.

bluSCALE4

I watched a lot of gore videos in my pre-teen years and it's definitely good and bad. I don't regret it but I also have zero appetite for it now. I know a few people that still have a morbid curiosity for it but not for me. If it did ground once, it doesn't illicit anything positive anymore.

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johnecheck

Gross. Yet another indicator that forcing a single closed-source algorithm is bad for users.

paulsutter

[flagged]

woodruffw

Scare quotes often reflect derision; they don't necessarily imply intention. I think in TFA's case they're suggesting that Instagram is downplaying the incident, since calling it an "error" puts in the same category as a service outage.

jkoebler

I wrote this article. The quote is in the headline because Instagram is calling it an error, I am not calling it an error. People have been wondering what happened and why, and have been posting on Reddit wondering why there’s no media attention. It’s a small signal, but I put the quote around “error” to indicate that I did some reporting and got official word from Meta about what happened, and was not just speculating.

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qwertox

They are verbatim from the page's title.

croes

Was it allowed content?

If not why did it still exist, so the error could show it?

micromacrofoot

The scare quotes don't suggest that it was deliberate, it's quoting instagram's response to highlight how ridiculous it is to call showing thousands of people gore a simple "error." They're dramatically minimizing the problem.

It seems like a fair callout to me, especially because instagram has made this "error" before at least one other time.

philosopher1234

I think we intend awful things all the time, without realizing it. To get at what the intentions are here you might ask things like:

* why this particular error and no other? The bug could’ve been that the content becomes particularly happy or cheery

* why a bug in the content at all? You don’t see bugs generally on Instagram, they are immensely careful about operations. How could something like this slip through? (Why are safeguards not prioritized)