Instagram Bans All Content Promoting Conversion Therapy
MENLO PARK (CBS SF / CNN) -- Instagram will ban any content that promotes conversion therapy, the social media platform told CNN on Friday, after activists called on it to block providers from advertising their services online.
The service, which is owned by Facebook, said it would expand its existing policies on hate speech worldwide to include posts that advertise or promote the practice.
Conversion therapy, a pseudo-scientific process that professes to change a person's sexuality, is widely discredited and condemned as harmful by major medical associations. But it is legal across most of the world, including in the United States and the United Kingdom.
Instagram's move follows appeals from users to remove an account used by Core Issues Trust, a UK-based promoter of conversion therapy.
"We don't allow attacks against people based on sexual orientation or gender identity and are updating our policies to ban the promotion of conversion therapy services," Tara Hopkins, Instagram's public policy director for Europe, the Middle East and Africa, said in a statement.
"We have removed violating content from @coreissuestrusttv. We are always reviewing our policies and will continue to consult with experts and people with personal experiences to inform our approach," she added.
The platform will also stop recommending content related to conversion therapy, such as testimonials to its efficacy or posts in praise of or in support of the practice, except those in a legislative context.
Earlier this year, it banned advertisements for the process.
Conversion therapy refers to any attempt to change someone's sexual orientation or gender identity. It does not work, and studies show that those subjected to it, or who choose to undergo it, are put at a greater risk of depression and suicide.
A number of US states have banned it, and Germany became one of the first major countries to outlaw it for minors in May.
California was one of the first states to have a conversion therapy ban, outlawing the practice since 2013.
In the United Kingdom, a total ban promised by Theresa May in mid-2018 has yet to materialize, and has not been included in either of Prime Minister Boris Johnson's legislative agendas set out at the state opening of parliament.
Facebook and Twitter did not immediately respond to questions about their policies.
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