Meta rejects accusation of censorship of language around female body

23 June 2023, 11:14

Protesters demonstrate
Meta protest 1. Picture: PA

Demonstrators gathered outside the company’s London office in King’s Cross on Friday morning.

Technology giant Meta has rejected an accusation of online censorship as protesters called for language around women’s bodies to be normalised.

Demonstrators gathered outside the company’s London office in King’s Cross on Friday morning.

She Oath, described as a female empowerment charity, joined representatives from period product firm Bodyform, which is running a campaign aimed at normalising use of words such as vagina, clitoris and vulva online.

These are our bodies and we shouldn’t be shamed or cast into the shadows for what we naturally have to experience

Brookmorgan Henry-Rennie, She Oath

Bodyform said that since launching its campaign it has been “slapped with multiple violations of Meta’s ad policy – deeming their content as too sexual and labelling it with an 18+ warning”.

It says menstrual health “shouldn’t be censored” and doing so makes “important subjects, that are already taboo, almost impossible to talk about”, affecting lives and health.

But Meta said some adverts had been removed by mistake and had since been reinstated, and apologised for any confusion.

The company said it has no blanket ban on words like menopause or vagina, adding that adverts are governed by a stricter set of policies “because they receive paid distribution to appear in people’s feeds”.

Demonstrators gathered to protest against what they described as online censorship of words to do with the female body (Joe Pepler/72Point/PA)
Demonstrators gathered to protest against what they described as online censorship of words to do with the female body (Joe Pepler/72Point/PA)

She Oath’s founder Brookmorgan Henry-Rennie said: “We use our platform to educate, entertain and inform around subject matters like authentic confidence, women’s health and well-being.

“So this shadow-banning is not just depriving trauma-experienced girls and women from gaining access to our resources, it’s putting them in further danger. These are our bodies and we shouldn’t be shamed or cast into the shadows for what we naturally have to experience.

“If it wasn’t for Bodyform’s ads being banned, we wouldn’t have even realised that our posts were being deprioritised.

“Meta really does need to do better.”

The adverts were removed by mistake by our automated review systems and have since been reinstated. We apologise for any confusion caused

Meta spokesperson

Ruth Gresty, spokesperson for Bodyform, said: “It’s unfortunate but not surprising that our latest campaign, which calls out the unnecessary censorship of words commonly used to talk about, describe and define women’s bodies and their experiences, has been censored by some social media companies.

“In doing so, these companies have simply underlined the need for campaigns of this nature that seek to break down the barriers that prevent women from being able to speak openly and confidently about their bodies.

“We at Bodyform will not be deterred from our mission to make talking about the female body normal.”

A spokesperson for Meta, which owns Facebook, said: “We want Facebook to be a place where people can express themselves and we are proud of the way our community uses the platform to have important and open conversations about women’s health.

“The adverts were removed by mistake by our automated review systems and have since been reinstated. We apologise for any confusion caused.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Person in yellow coat using smartphone on a train

Spyware accessing phone audio and cameras for data ‘of use to China’, NCSC warns

A woman’s hands on a laptop keyboard.

Majority of AI firms working on unhelpful ‘generic’ tools, think tank says

Bafta Games Awards 2025

Astro Bot sweeps Bafta Game Awards with five wins

A detailed new scan of the Titanic has revealed the ship's haunting final hours.

Scan reveals Titanic's final hours in ground-breaking discovery

Sabrina Carpenter's Fortnite avatar (Epic Games/PA)

Sabrina Carpenter joins Fortnite universe as Festival icon

The tools mean the accounts of under-16s are heavily restricted by default (Alamy/PA)

Meta expands Instagram parental controls and brings them to Facebook

a biotech start-up has announced the animals had been brought back to life

Dire wolf extinct for 12,500 years 'brought back to life', scientists claim

A server room in a data centre

Energy and tech giants to meet Government over plans to power UK AI

A message on an iPhone in London warning that Apple can no longer offer Advanced Data Protection to its customers in the UK

Home Office loses bid to keep Apple legal challenge private

Metro Bank website

Metro Bank launches AI-powered scam detection tool

Esther Ghey

Brianna Ghey’s mother considers parent of her daughter’s killer ‘a friend’

Molly Russell

Meta and Pinterest understood to have made donations to Molly Russell charity

TikTok is set to be banned in the United States later this week unless a buyer emerges.

Trump grants TikTok another extension, avoiding US ban, as he says deal to sell app is 'very close'

A TikTok logo on a phone

Q&A: Will TikTok be banned in the US this weekend?

TikTok logo on a phone

Trump says TikTok deal ‘very close’ as deadline looms

A child’s hand pressing a key of a laptop keyboard

Charity ‘appalled’ at reports online safety laws could be cut for US trade deal