Meta should define graphic depiction and sexualization in the Child Sexual Exploitation, Nudity and Abuse Community Standard. Meta should make clear that not all explicit language constitutes graphic depiction or sexualization and explain the difference between legal, clinical or medical terms and graphic content. Meta should also provide a clarification for distinguishing child sexual exploitation and reporting on child sexual exploitation. The Board will consider the recommendation implemented when language defining key terms and the distinction has been added to the Community Standards.
Our commitment: We will develop and publish a definition for graphic depictions and sexualization within our Community Standards for Child Sexual Exploitation, Nudity and Abuse. The definition will capture the distinction between violating content and non-violating content that may include descriptions in legal, clinical or medical contexts. We will also develop and publish clarifying guidelines for “depiction” and “reporting” in child sexual exploitation.
Considerations: As described within our Community Standards, we currently use warning labels when imagery is posted by a news agency that may depict child nudity in the context of famine, genocide, war crimes or crimes against humanity. We will further clarify that while reporting on child sexual exploitation is permitted, we do not allow graphic written descriptions. Based on the board’s recommendation, we will develop and publish clarifying guidelines for “depiction” and “reporting” in child sexual exploitation.
Next steps: We will begin developing definitions in response to this recommendation and aim to publish them before the end of 2022. We will provide updates on this process in future Quarterly Updates.