Apps\, social media fuel \'booming\' online prostitution: study

Apps, social media fuel 'booming' online prostitution: study

AFP  |  Paris 

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

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

In Israel, dating app is the most popular tool to find prostitutes, while in students in cybercafes join and 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 such as and Snapchat, promising "opportunities to make money very quickly" before posting and prostituting them.

Adverts on dating websites and 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 where legislation is more lenient," Yves Charpenel, of the told AFP.

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

"From the same computer, a 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.

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

Last March, the US 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, US 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

"We need to go further," it said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, June 04 2019. 20:05 IST