Mocked Sri Lankan cosplayer Amaya Suriyapperuma says Facebook needs Sinhala-speaking moderators to monitor online bullying.

Suriyapperuma and gal pal Seshani Cooray were subject to ridicule for cosplaying Wonder Woman at the Asus Sri Lanka Comic Con 2017.

But the two girls won the support of Wonder Woman actress Gal Gadot and director Patty Jenkins who tweeted support and encouragement.

The girls said they had countered the bullying by focusing their energies on reporting the pages that had subject them to ridicule and body shaming.

But cosplayer Amaya Suriyapperuma said Facebook needs Sinhala-speaking moderators to monitor the scale of online bullying in Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka is a South Asian country on the tip of the Indian peninsula, home to diverse ethic groups of which the majority is Sinhalese.

 

 

 

Facebook is to add a "dislike" button to its social network, founder Mark Zuckerberg has said.

In a Q+A session held at Facebook's headquarters in Menlo Park, California, the 31-year-old said the button would be a way for people to express empathy.

He said Facebook was "very close" to having it ready for user testing.

A "dislike" button has been constantly requested by some users since the introduction of the now-iconic "like" button in 2009.

"People have asked about the 'dislike' button for many years," Mr Zuckerberg told the audience on Tuesday.

"Probably hundreds of people have asked about this, and today is a special day because today is the day that I actually get to say we are working on it, and are very close to shipping a test of it."

However he went on to say he did not want it to be a mechanism with which people could "down vote" others' posts.

Instead, it will be for times when clicking "like" on "sad" posts felt insensitive.

Prof Andrea Forte, an expert in social and participatory media at Drexel University in Philadelphia, said users will not suddenly turn on each other's posts.

In an email, she wrote: "They may use a dislike button to express some negative emotions (like frustration with ads popping up in their feeds) but I doubt it will cause them to start wantonly disliking pictures of their friends' babies, dogs, cats and cooking experiments.

"I suspect it will mainly be used to express mild disapproval, or to express solidarity when someone posts about a negative event like a death or a loss."

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