The Samaritans photograph

The Samaritans

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HeadquartersEwell
United Kingdom
Founders Chad Varah
Founded1953
CeoRuth Sutherland
Region served England
Scotland
Wales
Ireland
Official site samaritans.org
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID927666
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About The Samaritans


Samaritans is a registered charity aimed at providing emotional support to anyone in emotional distress, struggling to cope, or at risk of suicide throughout Great Britain and Ireland, often through their telephone helpline.

Molly Russell: Tech firms still failing after teenager's death, says father

Molly Russell: Tech firms still failing after teenager's death, says father
Nov 28,2023 9:31 pm

... " It said it provides " access to The Samaritans right from our app for anyone who may need support" and invests in " ways to diversify recommendations" and " block harmful search terms"...

'Failure to act' on suicide website linked to 50 UK deaths

'Failure to act' on suicide website linked to 50 UK deaths
Oct 24,2023 1:31 am

... The Samaritans told us the act should go some way to improve safety...

Family courts: Mothers dying after 'abusers' claim access to children

Family courts: Mothers dying after 'abusers' claim access to children
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... Suicide prevention charity The Samaritans says the causes of suicide are often complex and there may not be a single identifiable cause...

Facebook work filtering posts 'cost me my humanity'

Facebook work filtering posts 'cost me my humanity'
Apr 24,2023 10:10 pm

......

Government denies weakening Online Safety Bill

Government denies weakening Online Safety Bill
Nov 28,2022 6:10 pm

... But it won t satisfy everyone - The Samaritans for example don t feel it adequately protects adults from harmful material...

Cost of Living: Your money-saving tips for Christmas

Cost of Living: Your money-saving tips for Christmas
Nov 1,2022 8:50 am

... " Anyone is welcome, Susan says, and she has informed The Samaritans to send anyone feeling lonely on Christmas Day to come to their community centre for food and company...

Watching the lying-in-state - 'The queue has a meditative magic of its own'

Watching the lying-in-state - 'The queue has a meditative magic of its own'
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... The Samaritans are on hand to help those who are overcome...

Logan Mwangi: Juror traumatised by murder trial evidence

Logan Mwangi: Juror traumatised by murder trial evidence
Jun 30,2022 5:40 pm

... " She said the court service advised jurors to go to The Samaritans, which she did, but as she was not able to talk about the case " it became a very short conversation"...

Molly Russell: Tech firms still failing after teenager's death, says father

Jun 23,2022 3:50 am

By Angus CrawfordBBC News

Social Media companies are still pushing " harmful content to literally millions of young people" Ian Russell , The Father of Molly Russell , has Said .

He Said he is horrified by the scale of the issue and that " little has changed" since Molly took her life aged 14. He fears more Young Lives could be lost.

New research from the Molly Rose Foundation shows young users can still access suicide and self-harm content.

Social Media platforms say they are working hard to keep teenagers safe.

The sites subject to the research by The Foundation Set Up in Molly's name - Tiktok , Instagram and Pinterest - Said they had created new tools to limit access to harmful material.

Molly, who took her own Life After being exposed to a stream of dark, depressing content on Pinterest and Instagram, would have turned 21 This Week .

An concluded she ended her life while suffering from depression and the negative effects of online content.

A researcher from The Foundation evaluated More Than 1,000 individual posts and videos, identified from searching 15 hashtags associated with harmful material and that Molly was known to engage with.

Data experts Bright Initiative helped analyse the posts and videos, which were published from 2018 to October this year.

On Instagram, the research found almost 50% of what they viewed contained content that " displayed hopelessness, feelings of misery and highly depressive themes".

On Tiktok , it found that half of the posts examined containing " harmful content" had been viewed More Than A Million times.

And, on Pinterest , the researcher was actively recommended multiple pictures of " people standing on cliff tops, drowning, stylised images of people in freefall through the air".

Online Safety campaigner Mr Russell Said " Six Years after Molly died, this must now be seen as a fundamental systemic failure that will continue to cost Young Lives ".

Meta, which owns Instagram, Said it had been working hard with experts and had " built More Than 30 tools to support teens and families, including our sensitive content control, which limits The Type of content teens are recommended".

A Pinterest spokesperson Said it was " committed to creating a safe platform for everyone" and constantly updated its policies and enforcement practices around self-harm content, " including blocking sensitive search terms and evolving our Machine Learning models so that this content is detected and removed as quickly as possible".

A Tiktok spokesperson Said " content that promotes self-harm or suicide is prohibited" on The Site , adding: " As The Report highlights, we strictly enforce these rules by removing 98% of suicide content before it is reported to us. "

It Said it provides " access to The Samaritans right from our app for anyone who may need support" and invests in " ways to diversify recommendations" and " block harmful search terms".

The research conceded that the platforms had made limited efforts to improve safety.

After Molly's death, Instagram announced a series of changes which The Report says " had some welcome targeted impact".

Tiktok , it Said , " appears to enforce its community standards more effectively than some other platforms". And " some improvements had been made" by Pinterest .

But overall The Report identifies problems on all three platforms:

Prof Louis Appleby, a government adviser on suicide prevention and professor of psychiatry at the University of Manchester, Said of the research: " We've moved on in how we view the online world.

" We Are in a new era of social responsibility and tech companies need to do more about their images and algorithms. "

The government believes that the Online Safety Act, which became law last month, should address these kinds of problems.

Regulator Ofcom is currently drawing up codes of practice which it expects tech companies to abide by and which will be enforceable by law.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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