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Showing Original Post only (View all)A girl was allegedly raped in the metaverse. Is this the beginning of a dark new future? [View all]
The cheerful language with which tech companies describe their platforms is often in stark contrast to the dark possibilities lurking within them. Meta, for example, describes its virtual world, the metaverse, as the next evolution in social connection and the successor to the mobile internet, a place where virtual reality lets you explore new worlds and shared experiences. But for a young girl in the UK recently, that shared experience was an alleged gang rape perpetrated by several adult men.
British police are investigating the sexual assault of the girl, identified only as being under the age of 16, in what is said to be the first investigation of its kind in the UK. The girl was reportedly wearing a virtual reality headset and playing an immersive game in the metaverse when her avatar was attacked.
Was this really rape? some have asked. The comments on an Instagram post for a story about the case in the New York Post were characteristically skeptical: Couldnt she have just turned it off? Can we focus on real-life crime please? I was killed in [the war video game Call of Duty], one person said sarcastically: Been waiting for my killer to be brought to justice.
The difference, of course, is that while Call of Duty players can expect to be virtually killed sometimes as part of the game, the girl had no reason to expect that she would be raped. It isnt yet known what game she was playing when the alleged assault occurred, but obviously there isnt an online game where the goal for adult players is to rape children. The fact that they are able to in the metaverse is the issue at the heart of this case, which has attracted international attention.
The question of whether virtual rape is really rape goes back to at least 1993, when the Village Voice published an article by Julian Dibbell about a rape in cyberspace. Dibbells piece reported on how the people behind avatars that were sexually assaulted in a virtual community felt emotions similar to those of victims of physical rape.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/jan/05/metaverse-sexual-assault-vr-game-online-safety-meta