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The Guardian
a day ago
- The Guardian
Society may have overestimated risk of the ‘manosphere', UK researchers say
Men who engage in the online 'manosphere' and the content of Andrew Tate are often able to express a 'strong commitment to equal treatment and fairness', according to research commissioned by Ofcom. Prompted by growing concerns about internet misogyny, researchers for the UK communications regulator followed the journeys of dozens of men through online content ranging from the US podcaster Joe Rogan to forums for 'incels' (involuntary celibates). They found that while a minority encountered 'extremely misogynistic content', many users of the manosphere were critically engaged, selective and capable of discarding messages that did not resonate with their values. They found it was far from a unified community: many participants felt the various subcultures under the manosphere umbrella were misunderstood, with extreme misogyny being grouped with benign self-improvement content. Several participants were drawn to it by its perceived humour, open debate and irreverence as well as connecting with views they found about traditional gender roles and family dynamics. 'This research does challenge the assumptions about the experiences and perceptions of individuals consuming manosphere content,' Ofcom said. 'Many of the participants expressed a strong commitment to equal treatment and fairness. They showed particular sensitivity to situations they perceived as unjust or discriminatory. This extended to issues specifically concerning men.' The report's author, Damon De Ionno, the managing director of Revealing Reality, who were commissioned by Ofcom to produce the study, said it 'suggests society has overestimated' the risk posed by the manosphere. It comes after rising violence against women and girls (VAWG) in England and Wales. Data published by the National Police Chiefs' Council in July 2024 found that about 3,000 VAWG offences were recorded by the police in 2022-23, an increase of 37% since 2018, with one in every 12 women a victim each year. Separate expert studies have found some evidence that the language of the manosphere can escalate into physical violence. A submission to parliament by a group of UK academics cited cases in which incels had gone on to commit offline acts of violence, including Elliot Rodger in Isla Vista in the USA in 2014 and Jake Davison in Portsmouth in 2021. The Ofcom study involved 38 men, and more misogynistic men may have declined to take part. Some potential recruits refused to take part, considering the government-appointed regulator to be part of the 'mainstream'. Perhaps the most impressionable group, boys under 16, were also not included. The study probed several manosphere subcultures, including 'red pill' (men who believe the world is unfair to men) and 'black pill' (those who believe unattractive men have very limited options for relationships) communities, incels, 'men going their own way' (MGTOW), men's rights activists, pickup artists and 'looksmaxxing' groups (where young men share tips about achieving chiselled cheekbones or 'hunter eyes' in an attempt to boost their sexual 'market value'), as well as topics surrounding self-improvement, masculinity and gender politics. Some of the content trawled for the study was obviously misogynistic, including posts condoning sexual violence against women. In other cases the misogyny was more ambiguous, such as self-help posts about boosting sexual success based on assumptions about women's sexual preferences. All of the men had engaged with content from Tate, the self-styled misogynist influencer who is facing charges in Britain including rape, human trafficking and controlling prostitution for gain, which he denies. But one participant said they viewed watching clips of Tate as 'entertainment' akin to watching a horror movie or playing Call of Duty, and the researchers said none of the interviewees had agreed with Tate's most extreme misogyny. Incel communities contained the most extremely misogynistic content, the Ofcom study found. They were notably full of messages promoting depressive and suicidal outlooks. 'Our research suggests society has overestimated the risk of the manosphere to women,' said De Ionno. 'It's not zero risk, but most of it doesn't have the power to radicalise people who are pretty discriminating and value-driven.' The research examined the attitudes of men who had become involved in several different corners of the manosphere from relatively mainstream content creators such as Piers Morgan to more niche groups such as those that talk about being 'red pilled'. One was the MGTOW movement, which discusses living without women. It has been described as misogynistic, but Ofcom's interviewees insisted it was not because it was about choosing to live without women, not hating them. One survey participant's pathway into the MGTOW part of the manosphere began with him being intentionally misidentified as a child's biological father, known as paternity fraud. Richard became involved in supporting other victims and came to believe that 'feminist ideology runs through' the courts system. He stopped dating and said: 'Once you've red-pilled about all this, you can't unsee it.' Another man, Matt, said the MGTOW influencers 'prey on any … amount of bitterness and resentment you have in your life from a negative situation'. Ofcom said: 'A minority of participants described encountering extremely misogynistic content online – with the most extreme examples more likely to be found on closed groups or among incel communities. 'These spaces were also notably full of messages promoting 'black pill' concepts of self-loathing and hopelessness, as well as depressive and even suicidal outlooks. Participants that were more socially isolated offline tended to have greater depth of engagement within these closed communities, and so may be at greater risk of adopting harmful views or mindsets, due to their strong group identity and the individual's wider vulnerability.'


The Citizen
27-04-2025
- Entertainment
- The Citizen
Roblox Exposed: Risks to children playing Roblox concerning
Roblox acknowledges that children using the platform may be exposed to harmful content and 'bad actors'. A child's avatar enters a virtual bedroom and joins others in sexually suggestive animations. No alarms. No filters. Just another day on Roblox – a platform used by over 85 million people daily, more than 40% of whom are under the age of 13. As Roblox faces mounting criticism for exposing children to explicit content and online predators, the cracks in modern parental control systems are becoming harder to ignore. Parents concerns This comes as parents shared their serious concerns about children experiencing addiction, seeing traumatising content and being approached by strangers on the hugely popular website and app. Early parental controls were simple filters designed to block explicit content. Today's monitoring tools and screen‑time limits still lag behind the pace of online innovation. Roblox has become a focal point: investigations uncovered a 10‑year‑old's avatar entering virtual spaces featuring a female avatar wearing fishnet stockings gyrating on a bed with sexualized dance avatars, and voice chats sometimes circulate explicit language despite AI moderation. ALSO READ: Assassin's Creed Shadows transports gamers to feudal Japan Harmful content Roblox acknowledges that children using the platform may be exposed to harmful content and 'bad actors'. The company said it is working hard to fix this, but that industry-wide collaboration and government intervention are needed. However, Damon De Ionno of Revealing Reality observed that the new safety features announced by Roblox last week don't go far enough. 'Children can still chat with strangers, not on their friends list'. Parental control Experts and parents agree that today's parental controls are falling behind. Despite updates platforms still allow children to interact with strangers and access misrated content. Parents report feeling overwhelmed by inconsistent safety tools that are hard to customize and easy to bypass. A Mobile Premier League (MPL) spokesperson noted that the digital spaces kids use today are fast-moving and social. 'Safety needs to be built in at the design stage, not added later. Controls must be flexible, proactive, and truly protective. Effective regulation of digital environments is essential to protect young players and ensure safer gaming communities.' Children's online behaviour According to MPL, the problems highlighted by the Roblox case are not limited to one platform. They reveal a deeper, system-wide failure of parental controls that have not evolved alongside children's online behaviour. It said that real-time monitoring, customizable safety settings, and standardised protections across platforms are essential for meaningful safety. 'To protect young users, technology companies, regulators, and child safety advocates must collaborate on smarter, more consistent solutions.' Creating safer digital spaces requires more than patchwork fixes, MPLA said, 'it demands a unified and proactive approach'. ALSO READ: Why playing video games might be the best thing for your brain