
TikTokers call for 'chubby filter' to be banned
TikTok users have told the BBC they think a viral tool which makes people appear overweight should be banned from the platform.Known as a "chubby filter", the artificial intelligence (AI) tool takes a photo of a person and edits their appearance to look as though they have put on weight.Many people have shared their before and after images on the platform with jokes about how different they look - however others say it is a form of "body shaming" and should not be permitted.Experts have also warned the filter could fuel a "toxic diet culture" online and potentially contribute to eating disorders.TikTok has not responded to a request for comment.
Sadie, who has 66,000 followers on TikTok, is one of those calling for the "mean" filter to be banned."It felt like girls being like, 'oh, I've won because I'm skinny and wouldn't it be the worst thing ever to be fat'," the 29-year-old from Bristol said. She said she had been contacted by women who said they had deleted TikTok from their phones because the trend made them feel bad about themselves. "I just don't feel like people should be ridiculed for their body just for opening an app," she said. Dr Emma Beckett, a food and nutrition scientist, told the BBC she felt the trend was "a huge step backwards" in weight stigma."It's just the same old false stereotypes and tropes about people in larger bodies being lazy and flawed, and something to be desperately avoided," she said.She warned that could have a broad social effect."The fear of weight gain contributes to eating disorders and body dissatisfaction, it fuels toxic diet culture, making people obsess over food and exercise in unhealthy ways and opening them up to scam products and fad diets."And it pressures everyone to conform to narrow beauty and health standards, rather than finding what works best for their own body - that causes harm to everyone, both in physical and mental health."
Testing the 'chubby filter'
By Jessica Sherwood, BBC Social NewsFilters - which use AI to manipulate a person's appearance - are common on TikTok.Many are harmless - for example one popular trend makes it appear as if a person was made out of Lego.They are often designed by individuals with no link to TikTok - as appears to be the case with the new "chubby filter".Some of the most popular videos using the filter have been liked tens of thousands of times.For the purpose of this article, I used the filter on myself.I felt incredibly uncomfortable.As someone who is very body positive and has struggled with their self-image in the past, using it couldn't be further away from how I personally use social media and I was unhappy that TikTok pushed it to me in the first place.
This filter appeared on my TikTok "For You" page the other day despite me not engaging with any weight-related or health content.After watching the video and reading the comments that was it - the way TikTok's algorithm works means it began to suggest me similar videos from other people using the filter, and even another where AI can turn you thinner.Thankfully it also began to start showing me creators who were criticising the trend, some of whom we've spoken to for this article.AI images and filters have become commonplace on TikTok and quickly accepted to be used for fun - the same way some Gen-Zs and Millennials might remember Snapchat filters. But filters like these, although they may seem fun, can be very damaging to someone's mental health and encourage them to compare themselves not only to others, but an unrealistic version of themselves.
'Damaging' and 'toxic'
The BBC has spoken to a number of TikTok users who said they were uncomfortable with the filter.Nina, who lives in north Wales, said she felt it fed into a "narrative" being spread online tying together people's appearance with their self-worth."This is a toxic view that I thought we were moving away from," she said. "If a filter is clearly offensive it should be removed," she told the BBC.Emma, who lives in Ayr, agreed."My first thought when I saw the 'chubby filter' was how damaging that would be."People were basically saying they looked disgusting because they were 'chubby' and as a curvier woman, who essentially looks like the "after" photo on this filter, it was disheartening for me."
Nina said she was happy to see people criticising the trend, which she called "immoral and insensitive"."We should be lifting each other up, not shaming each other's bodies," she said.Sadie agreed that it should not be allowed - however she felt there might be other things TikTok could do."Maybe it should have a warning," she said. "If there's themes of body shaming or an eating disorder or anything like that, I think there should be a way of flagging it where, if these people want to post it, they post it, but it doesn't get pushed to a wider audience."

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She said: 'This is about helping people die in a civilised way and helping their families not go through a horrendous experience of watching a loved one die in agony.' The beginning of Friday's session saw MPs add a new opt-out clause to the Bill. The amendment, meaning no person including all health and social care professionals, can be obliged to take part in assisted dying had been debated and approved last month, but has now been formally added to the Bill. The Bill passed second reading stage by a majority of 55 during a historic vote in November which saw MPs support the principle of assisted dying. Demonstrators both for and against a change in the law once again gathered outside Parliament to make their views known on the Bill. 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MPs are entitled to have a free vote on the Bill and any amendments, meaning they vote according to their conscience rather than along party lines.