“It’s pure speculation, but I think if they’d have cut his stream off he wouldn’t have ended his life.” “I firmly believe, because I knew him and how these interactions worked, had the stream ended it would’ve diverted his attention enough for SOME kind of intervention,” Steen wrote in an email. McNutt’s friend and podcast co-host Josh Steen told TechCrunch that the stream had been flagged long before he killed himself. We let people know about this and if they felt we made a mistake, we still gave people the option to tell us they disagreed with our decision. The number of appeals is also much lower in this report because we couldn’t always offer them. With fewer content reviewers, we took action on fewer pieces of content on both Facebook and Instagram for suicide and self-injury, and child nudity and sexual exploitation on Instagram. In a “community standards enforcement report” issued Friday, Facebook admitted that its army of (contractor) human reviewers, whose thankless job it is to review violent and sexual content all day, had been partly disabled due to the pandemic. How could something so graphic and plainly violating the platform’s standards, being actively flagged by users, be allowed to stay up for so long? The video of Ronnie McNutt’s suicide originated on August 31, and took nearly three hours to take down in the first place, by which time it had been seen and downloaded by innumerable people. ![]() It’s a very significant process.Platforms scramble as ‘Plandemic’ conspiracy video spreads misinformation like wildfireįor all the platforms’ talk of advanced algorithms and instant removal of rule-violating content, these events seem to show them failing when they count the most: In extremity. We liaise with the RCMP in some cases, we talk to parents, we offer counselling services, we set up a safety plan for the child. “In a case where we are informed about a case of bullying, we take immediate action, and the process is very thorough. When asked if the district knew whether Todd had been bullied, she said “school and community supports were in place” and that officials were informed of the girl’s death this morning. She confirmed that Todd had been a student in the district, but had transferred to another school earlier this year. Irena Pochop is the communications manager for the Maple Ridge and Pitt Meadows school district, east of Vancouver. We’ll provide counselling services there as long as is necessary.” They’re helping staff and students through their grief and shock. goes to the site and that was the case this morning. “Whenever there is a student death, our critical incident team. She said once the coroner’s report is written, the case will go to a child-death review, which is a second layer of review and is mandated by provincial legislation. I know people always want instant answers, but … this is a case very much where we want to be really thorough and make sure we get the right answers McLintock said a field coroner was on the scene and had consulted with a child death coroner, and while foul play was ruled out by Thursday morning, the service isn’t releasing information on how Todd died. I’m still here, aren’t I?”Ĭoquitlam RCMP would only confirm a teenager had died in her home and the circumstances were not suspicious. “Everyone’s future will be bright one day, you just gotta pull through. ![]() ![]() I need someone.” YouTubeīeneath the video, though, Todd posted a note saying she produced it not for attention, but “to be an inspiration and to show that I can be strong.” ![]() The video ends with her note: “I have nobody. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Manage Print Subscription / Tax Receipt.
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