Thierry Henry says social media giants are not doing enough to tackle online abuse.
The former Arsenal and France forward, who had 15 million followers across Facebook, Instagram and Twitter, disabled his accounts in March, calling on platforms to tackle online abuse with the same effort they put into taking down material that infringes copyright.
Six months since that move, the 44-year-old, who suffered racial abuse during his playing career, said things are the same and that he might never reactive his personal accounts.
“They [social media companies] are doing nowhere near what is required for us to feel safe on it – let’s be honest,” Henry told a news conference at Lisbon’s Web Summit.
“It is an essential tool in the world we live in but can it be safe? That’s the big thing.”
Conte appointed Tottenham head coach
What will Spurs look like under Conte?
Emery in talks to become Newcastle manager
Merson Says: Conte can aid Alli, but Kane still an issue
Neville warns Sancho: Don’t be another Van de Beek
F1’s revealing stats: The big gains and how Max has dominated
Carra: How ‘outstanding’ Man Utd nailed high press
British heavyweight destroyer is heading for Dave Allen?
Although Henry is not keen to go back to social media, he is joining forces with sportswear company PUMA to come up with ways to tackle online abuse, including a platform encouraging people to do good by taking on tasks, from petitions to protests.
Platform creator Dylan Ingham described it as a “tool box of social action”.
Instagram announced in February a series of measures to tackle online abuse and Twitter said in 2019 that “vile content” had no place on its platform, but experts have warned that the global nature of the problem makes it difficult to take legal steps against the perpetrators.
Henry said he wanted to make sure young Black people followed their dreams and were not put off by internet trolls.
“That’s my message: you shouldn’t be stopped by those guys,” Henry said. “If you ever feel like you don’t belong, you do belong … nobody can stop you from doing anything you want.”
Hate Won’t Win
Sky Sports is committed to making skysports.com and our channels on social media platforms a place for comment and debate that is free of abuse, hate and profanity.
If you see a reply to Sky Sports posts and/or content with an expression of hate on the basis of race, sex, colour, gender, nationality, ethnicity, disability, religion, sexuality, age or class, please copy the URL to the hateful post and screengrab it and email us here.
Kick It Out reporting racism
Online Reporting Form | Kick It Out
Kick It Out is football’s equality and inclusion organisation – working throughout the football, educational and community sectors to challenge discrimination, encourage inclusive practices and campaign for positive change.
