Social media: the factory of terror (Part 2)
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Overview
A space full of offices where thousands of people work every day in front of a computer so that, when users turn on their mobile phones, they don't have to see the most perverse, violent and obscene aspects of human beings. They see videos and photos circulating on the networks with content that we would never believe possible. The testimony of these content moderators confirms what Béjar denounces in the first episode: user protection went from being a priority for social networks to becoming an obstacle to earning more money. These workers cannot be identified due to a confidentiality clause in their contracts. But they want to tell what they have experienced because it has changed them forever.
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