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UK dad fights for tech justice after daughter’s death

The bereaved father is also seeking an end to impunity for big tech.
UK dad fights for tech justice after daughter’s death
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LONDON, United Kingdom (AFP) — The father of British teenager Molly Russell, who took her own life after viewing pro-suicide content online, hopes a documentary about her death will inspire change.

The film — “Molly vs the Machines” — about his 14-year-old daughter will “bring back some of the grief,” Ian Russell acknowledged.

But in an interview with Agence France-Presse, he said it will highlight how the tragedy was not isolated, and “there’s a real hope that it will become part of a conversation that might help bring about change.”

The documentary, which premieres in British cinemas from 1 March and airs on the UK’s Channel 4 on 5 March, recounts his quest to hold “digital systems designed for profit” accountable for his loss, according to Russell.

Perhaps surprisingly, he opposes an outright social media ban for children, arguing “getting the platforms to change is actually much more effective.”

The bereaved father is also seeking an end to impunity for big tech, which he says purposefully targets vulnerable people with addictive algorithms feeding them harmful content for monetary gain.

‘Baffling’

Molly took her own life in 2017, with a coroner concluding five years later that she had died from an act of self-harm while suffering from the “negative effects of online content.”

The inquest into her death heard that, of the 16,300 posts Molly saved, shared or liked on Instagram in the six-month period before her death, 2,100 related to depression, self-harm or suicide.

Her engagement with pro-suicide content increased towards the end of her life, until “this intelligent, caring, beautiful person had been persuaded she was worthless,” her father said.

“How Molly of all people could ever have been convinced of that, for those of us lucky enough to have known her, is just baffling,” he added.

Research published in October by the Molly Rose Foundation, a suicide prevention charity founded and chaired by Russell, showed 37 percent of children aged 13 to 17 had seen at least one type of high-risk content relating to suicide, self-harm, depression or eating disorders during the week they were surveyed.

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