• About Us
  • Who Are We
  • Work With Us
Friday, April 17, 2026
No Result
View All Result
The Globe Post
39 °f
New York
44 ° Fri
46 ° Sat
40 ° Sun
41 ° Mon
No Result
View All Result
The Globe Post
No Result
View All Result
Home World

Apps, Social Media Fuel ‘Booming’ Online Prostitution [Study]

Staff Writer by Staff Writer
06/04/19
in World
Facebook logo

The logo of the social network Facebook on a broken screen of a mobile phone. Photo: AFP

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Apps like Facebook and Tinder are fuelling the “soaring industry” of online prostitution and sexual exploitation, according to a worldwide study published by a French anti-prostitution group on Tuesday.

Prostitution has moved “from the street to the Internet,” where pimps recruit young girls via Snapchat and Instagram before prostituting them in apartments rented on Airbnb, said anti-prostitution group Fondation Scelles.

The report, “Sexual exploitation: New challenges, news answers” looked at trends in 35 countries.

Worlwide the primary victims of #sexualexploitation are children/adolescents/young adults: sugar babies in Canada, street children in Brazil, victims of sex tourism in Thailand #Newchallenges #Newanswers the #5thGlobalReport scheduled on June4 https://t.co/oq8gPmNgO2 via @YouTube

— Fondation Scelles (@Fond_Scelles) May 28, 2019

In Israel, dating app Tinder is the most popular tool to find prostitutes, while in Zambia students in cybercafes join Whatsapp and Facebook groups to connect with prostitutes and pimps in a few clicks, the report said.

In France, gangs contact underage girls from “welfare homes and high schools” on social networks such as Facebook and Snapchat, promising “opportunities to make money very quickly” before posting online advertisements and prostituting them.

Adverts on dating websites and online forums about sexuality — but also “websites having no direct connection to this theme” — facilitate “the concealment, anonymity and discretion… of these illegal activities,” the study said.

“This is happening around the world, from restrictive countries like China, to Germany where legislation is more lenient,” Yves Charpenel, head of the Fondation Scelles told AFP.

However, it can be hard to track down perpetrators, who hide behind online anonymity and ambiguous advertisements for “massages” and “pleasant moments.”

“From the same computer, a criminal network can find its ‘products’, advertise to clients, and then launder the money,” Charpenel said.

He condemned the “industrial scale” of online prostitution, which allows pimps to “avoid personal risk” by creating a distance from their victims.

#Prostitution : des victimes, des proxénètes et des clients toujours plus jeunes. #RapportMondialProstitution https://t.co/MyvWdFOsp4

— Fondation Scelles (@Fond_Scelles) June 4, 2019


‘Mobilize Social Networks’

In recent years, governments have grappled with the problem of balancing internet freedom and holding sites accountable for their content.

Last March, the U.S. Congress passed a bill that allows victims of sex trafficking to seek justice against website owners who knowingly promote or facilitate the practise.

A month later, U.S. authorities shut down classified advertising website Backpage — accused of being the biggest website for prostitution in the world — and indicted the site’s co-founders on charges of enabling prostitution and money laundering.

In France, advertising site Vivastreet shut down its “Encounters” section last June to prevent “abuse” or “inappropriate use” from “certain users.”

“These are the first significant milestones towards an authentic governance of the Internet,” the report said.

The organisation called on authorities to “mobilise social networks” and hold accountable websites which profit from online prostitution.

“We need to go further,” it said.

Modern Slavery in UK: One Courageous Woman’s Story

ShareTweet
Staff Writer

Staff Writer

AFP with The Globe Post

Related Posts

US President Donald Trump during a press conference.
Opinion

No Thank You, Mr. Trump, We Don’t Need Your Opinion About Everything

by Edward C. Halperin
July 23, 2020
Prostitute near the Matabiau railway station in Toulouse, southwestern France
Opinion

UK’s Stance on Trafficking of Nigerian Women Far Beyond Faux Pas

by Jacob Udo-Udo Jacob
July 12, 2019
Victims of sex trafficking in Mali.
Featured

False Promises: Sex Trafficking, Exploitation on the Rise in Africa

by Bryan Bowman
January 25, 2019
Next Post
Yemen, Ethiopia, Somalia

Drought in Somalia Forces Thousands to Flee in Search of Water, Food

A Syrian refugee holds a baby in a refugee camp set in the town of Harmanli, south-east of Sofia

Social Media Exacerbates Violence Against Vulnerable Groups [Report]

Recommended

Sydney Harbour Bridge and Australian flags

‘Industrial’ Clickbait Disinformation Targets Australian Politics

April 15, 2026
A new Hungarian policy on overtime, denounced as a “slave law,” seems to be uniting the country in opposition against Viktor Orban

‘Liberated’: Hungarian Youths Celebrate Orban’s Defeat

April 13, 2026
A man holding a Venezuelan national flag during a protest against President Nicolas Maduro.

Venezuela Police Clash With Protesters Demanding Salary Rises

April 10, 2026
An Iranian motorcyclist rides past the Gandhi Hospital, which is damaged after US-Israeli strikes on a state TV telecommunication tower nearby in Tehran, Iran, on March 2, 2026.

US-Iran Truce: What We Know

April 8, 2026
Two protesters wave Mexican flags while standing on a vandalized Waymo vehicle during a demonstration in Los Angeles, California, on June 8, 2025, following a series of aggressive federal immigration operations in the city.

Family Buries Mexican Who Died in US Migrant Detention

April 6, 2026
Rescuers sift through the rubble at the scene of an Israeli strike that targets Beirut's southern suburbs

IOM Warns of ‘Alarming’ Risk of Long-Term Mass Displacement in Lebanon

April 3, 2026

Opinion

A Cuban street with a flag

Cuba Through a Pulse: Intimacy, Poverty, and the Shadow of Revolution

March 10, 2026
An Iranian walking in front of a wall painting of the Iranian flag in Tehran

Iran Can’t Dominate the Middle East Without Iraq

January 13, 2026
US President Donald Trump

Vladimir Trump and Blood for Oil

January 5, 2026
A trial COVID-19 vaccine

America’s Global Health Retreat Is a Gift to Its Rivals

November 12, 2025
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

UN Might Tolerate Netanyahu, and White House Might Welcome Him, But He’s Still Guilty of Genocide

September 30, 2025
Former President Donald Trump speaks at a Fox News Town Hall

Cruelties Are US

August 25, 2025
Facebook Twitter

Newsletter

Do you like our reporting?
SUBSCRIBE

About Us

The Globe Post

The Globe Post is part of Globe Post Media, a U.S. digital news organization that is publishing the world's best targeted news sites.

submit oped

© 2018 The Globe Post

No Result
View All Result
  • National
  • World
  • Business
  • Interviews
  • Lifestyle
  • Democracy at Risk
    • Media Freedom
  • Opinion
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Book Reviews
    • Stage
  • Submit Op-ed

© 2018 The Globe Post