Prince Harry says social media stoking ‘crisis of hate’

Prince Harry on Thursday said social media was stoking a ‘crisis of hate,’ and urged companies to rethink their roles in advertising on digital platforms.

In an opinion piece for U.S. business magazine Fast Company headlined ‘Social media is dividing us. Together, we can redesign it,’ Harry said that social media, as it stands, is ‘unwell’.

The former senior royal said he and his wife, Meghan, have spent the past few weeks working with business leaders and marketing executives on the issue to try and enact positive change.

‘The digital landscape is unwell and companies like yours have the chance to reconsider your role in funding and supporting online platforms that have contributed to, stoked, and created the conditions for a crisis of hate, a crisis of health, and a crisis of truth,’ he wrote. 

The Duke of Sussex called for online communities to be ‘defined more by compassion than hate; by truth instead of misinformation; by equity and inclusiveness instead of injustice and fearmongering; by free, rather than weaponised, speech.’

Prince Harry on Thursday said social media was stoking a ‘crisis of hate,’ and he appealed to companies to rethink their roles in advertising on digital platforms

The royal said he and Meghan started their social media reform campaign at the same time as the launch of the Stop Hate for Profit movement in June.

That campaign was launched by a coalition of non-profits who urged companies to cease advertising on Facebook until the Mark Zuckerberg-owned company more effectively tackled hate speech on its platform. 

Enlisting the support of more than 1,000 companies, the Stop Hate For Profit campaign ‘sent a $7 billion message through withheld ad dollars,’ Harry wrote.

The 35-year-old continues that while most people enjoy the likes of Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, because its a free way to access entertainment and information, Harry insists, ‘it’s not actually free; the cost is high’. 

Harry, the grandson of Queen Elizabeth, called for online communities to be 'defined more by compassion than hate; by truth instead of misinformation; by equity and inclusiveness instead of injustice and fearmongering; by free, rather than weaponised, speech.'

Harry, the grandson of Queen Elizabeth, called for online communities to be ‘defined more by compassion than hate; by truth instead of misinformation; by equity and inclusiveness instead of injustice and fearmongering; by free, rather than weaponised, speech.’

‘Every time you click they learn more about you. Our information, private data, and unknown habits are traded on for advertising space and dollars,’ he wrote.

‘The price we’re all paying is much higher than it appears. Whereas normally we’re the consumer buying a product, in this ever-changing digital world, we are the product.’

Harry urged every social media platform to step up and take responsibility for creating new standards for hate speech, and to work more actively with consumers – not ad-buying corporations – to create a safe environment that isn’t cashing in on misinformation and hate.

‘Companies that purchase online ads must also recognise that our digital world has an impact on the physical world—on our collective health, on our democracies, on the ways we think and interact with each other, on how we process and trust information,’ Harry wrote.

‘Because, if we are susceptible to the coercive forces in digital spaces, then we have to ask ourselves – what does this mean for out As a father, this is especially concerning to me.’  

Harry said it isn’t only corporations who need to act either, users and consumers must be more engaged too. He said that crafting spaces that are supportive and trustworthy ‘both online and off – everyone wins. Even the platforms themselves.’ 

Harry and Meghan, formally known as the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, now live in Los Angeles after stepping down from their royal roles in March to forge new careers.

In a speech last month, Meghan urged teen girls and young women to drown out sometimes ‘painfully loud’ negative online chatter with positivity.

In his opinion piece, Harry urged companies to use their advertising dollars ‘to demand change from the very places that give a safe haven and vehicle of propagation to hate and division.’

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk