There's a dark side to animal selfies.
Although most people aren't interested in harming wild critters,The Eroticism of Class and the Enigma of Margaret Atwood's "Alias Grace" the watchdog organization World Animal Protection says that Instagram selfies taken with animals are contributing to eco-tourism companies who poach wild animals (including sloths and crocodiles) for selfie opportunities and confine them in appalling places, like broken refrigerators.
SEE ALSO: Instagram's new stickers let you add polls to your StoryThe organization is now asking Instagram — home to tens of billions of pictures and an untold number of selfies — to discourage the app's users from including compromised critters in their selfies.
The CEO of World Animal Protection, Steve McIvor, revealed in a Guardianopinion piece today that it sent investigators to two popular tourist locations in the Amazon -- Manaus in Brazil and Puerto Alegria in Peru -- and discovered "heartbreaking" conditions.
Investigators observed anteaters getting hit and slapped, caimans with mouths taped shut "stored" in broken fridges, and anacondas confined in dark boxes — when they're not temporally released for selfie duty.
Tree-dwelling sloths, too, couldn't escape capture. According to McIvor:
The team also discovered sloths are being poached from the wild to be used for selfies. Each sloth is usually held by about five people within just a few minutes, causing them immense stress. Behind the scenes, they are tied to trees with rope and, tragically, rarely live to six months.
In a written statement, an Instagram spokesperson told Mashable that "We prohibit the use of Instagram to facilitate or organize criminal activity that causes physical harm to animals." What's more, Instagram seems well aware of the problem of unethically taken selfies:
In ongoing conversations with wildlife experts, we are looking at ways to provide our community with information around activities that can be harmful to animals and nature such as posting content that may depict exploitation of wildlife and bad welfare practices.
World Animal Protection wants Instagram to update its user guidelines to include a section on animal cruelty. It also encourages users to sign its "Wildlife Selfie Pledge," to show Instagram that a significant number of people are concerned about the problem.
And for those traveling into sloth country, the organization offers this reminder:
"Sloths do not want a hug – they just want to survive."
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
How I met my partner on X/Twitter
There's a Nokia 3310 with a gold Putin face on it waiting for you
Elusive whale caught on video for the first time
Zayn accepted an award he didn't win, so iHeartRadio made up a new category for him
Best early Prime Day Fitbit deals 2025
Sexual abuse survivor Thordis Elva defends forgiving her rapist on TV
11 times Emma Watson was the hero we all needed
American paparazzi confuse Deepika Padukone with Priyanka Chopra and she isn't amused
The Babelio sound machine is for babies. I love it anyway.
A pizza place got super judgy over one pineapple
Video Games Are Better The Second Time You Play Them
Trump still refuses to wear his tie correctly and tapes it down instead
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。