Angry gamblers responsible for nearly half of social media player abuse
- The identities of 15 highly abusive account authors were reported to national law enforcement, and about 12,000 posts or comments were pointed out to social media platforms this year as part of a new attempt to protect tennis players and officials from cyberbullying.
- Nearly half of the online abuse came from what were described as angry gamblers, with the most common types of abuse being sexist remarks or sexually inappropriate content.
- From January to October, nearly 2.5 million posts were monitored by a combination of artificial intelligence and people for harassment, abuse, or threats.
- The results of the first 10 months of the program were announced by the groups that launched it: the WTA Women's Professional Tour, the International Tennis Federation, and the organizations that run Wimbledon and the U.S. Open.
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Coverage Details
Total News Sources0
Leaning Left4Leaning Right3Center4Last UpdatedBias Distribution36% Left, 36% Center
Bias Distribution
- 36% of the sources lean Left, 36% of the sources are Center
37% Center
L 36%
C 37%
R 27%
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