“There I was, being virtually groped in a snowy fortress with my brother-in-law and husband watching.”

The following report is from Technology Review, published on December 16th, 2021:

Last week, Meta (the umbrella company formerly known as Facebook) opened up access to its virtual-reality social media platform, Horizon Worlds. Early descriptions of the platform make it seem fun and wholesome, drawing comparisons to Minecraft. In Horizon Worlds, up to 20 avatars can get together at a time to explore, hang out, and build within the virtual space.

But not everything has been warm and fuzzy. According to Meta, on November 26, a beta tester reported something deeply troubling: she had been groped by a stranger on Horizon Worlds. On December 1, Meta revealed that she’d posted her experience in the Horizon Worlds beta testing group on Facebook.

Meta’s internal review of the incident found that the beta tester should have used a tool called “Safe Zone” that’s part of a suite of safety features built into Horizon Worlds. Safe Zone is a protective bubble users can activate when feeling threatened. Within it, no one can touch them, talk to them, or interact in any way until they signal that they would like the Safe Zone lifted.

Vivek Sharma, the vice president of Horizon, called the groping incident “absolutely unfortunate,” telling The Verge,

That’s good feedback still for us because I want to make [the blocking feature] trivially easy and findable.

It’s not the first time a user has been groped in VR—nor, unfortunately, will it be the last. But the incident shows that until companies work out how to protect participants, the metaverse can never be a safe place.

“There I Was, Being Virtually Groped”

When Aaron Stanton heard about the incident at Meta, he was transported to October 2016. That was when a gamer, Jordan Belamire, penned an open letter on Medium describing being groped in Quivr, a game Stanton co-designed in which players, equipped with bow and arrows, shoot zombies.

In the letter, Belamire described entering a multiplayer mode, where all characters were exactly the same save for their voices.

In between a wave of zombies and demons to shoot down, I was hanging out next to BigBro442, waiting for our next attack. Suddenly, BigBro442’s disembodied helmet faced me dead-on. His floating hand approached my body, and he started to virtually rub my chest. ‘Stop!’ I cried … This goaded him on, and even when I turned away from him, he chased me around, making grabbing and pinching motions near my chest. Emboldened, he even shoved his hand toward my virtual crotch and began rubbing.

There I was, being virtually groped in a snowy fortress with my brother-in-law and husband watching.

Stanton and his cofounder, Jonathan Schenker, immediately responded with an apology and an in-game fix. Avatars would be able to stretch their arms into a V gesture, which would automatically push any offenders away.

Stanton, who today leads the VR Institute for Health and Exercise, says Quivr didn’t track data about that feature, “nor do I think it was used much.” But Stanton thinks about Belamire often and wonders if he could have done more in 2016 to prevent the incident that occurred in Horizon Worlds a few weeks ago.

There’s so much more to be done here. No one should ever have to flee from a VR experience to escape feeling powerless.

VR Sexual Harassment Is Sexual Harassment, Full Stop

A recent review of the events around Belamire’s experience published in the journal for the Digital Games Research Association found that “many online responses to this incident were dismissive of Belamire’s experience and, at times, abusive and misogynistic … readers from all perspectives grappled with understanding this act given the virtual and playful context it occurred in.” Belamire faded from view, and I was unable to find her online.

A constant topic of debate on message boards after Belamire’s Medium article was whether or not what she had experienced was actually groping if her body wasn’t physically touched.

I think people should keep in mind that sexual harassment has never had to be a physical thing. It can be verbal, and yes, it can be a virtual experience as well.

Says Jesse Fox, an associate professor at Ohio State University who researches the social implications of virtual reality.

Katherine Cross, who researches online harassment at the University of Washington, says that when virtual reality is immersive and real, toxic behavior that occurs in that environment is real as well.

At the end of the day, the nature of virtual-reality spaces is such that it is designed to trick the user into thinking they are physically in a certain space, that their every bodily action is occurring in a 3D environment. It’s part of the reason why emotional reactions can be stronger in that space, and why VR triggers the same internal nervous system and psychological responses.

That was true in the case of the woman who was groped on Horizon Worlds. According to The Verge, her post read:

Sexual harassment is no joke on the regular internet, but being in VR adds another layer that makes the event more intense. Not only was I groped last night, but there were other people there who supported this behavior which made me feel isolated in the Plaza [the virtual environment’s central gathering space].

Sexual assault and harassment in virtual worlds is not new, nor is it realistic to expect a world in which these issues will completely disappear. So long as there are people who will hide behind their computer screens to evade moral responsibility, they will continue to occur.

The real problem, perhaps, has to do with the perception that when you play a game or participate in a virtual world, there’s what Stanton describes as a “contract between developer and player.”

As a player, I’m agreeing to being able to do what I want in the developer’s world according to their rules. But as soon as that contract is broken and I’m not feeling comfortable anymore, the obligation of the company is to return the player to wherever they want to be and back to being comfortable.

The question is: Whose responsibility is it to make sure users are comfortable? Meta, for example, says it gives users access to tools to keep themselves safe, effectively shifting the onus onto them.

We want everyone in Horizon Worlds to have a positive experience with safety tools that are easy to find—and it’s never a user’s fault if they don’t use all the features we offer. We will continue to improve our UI and to better understand how people use our tools so that users are able to report things easily and reliably. Our goal is to make Horizon Worlds safe, and we are committed to doing that work.

Meta spokesperson Kristina Milian said.

Milian said that users must undergo an onboarding process prior to joining Horizon Worlds that teaches them how to launch Safe Zone. She also said regular reminders are loaded into screens and posters within Horizon Worlds.

screenshot of Safe Zone interface from Meta
Courtesy: Facebook
screenshot of Safe Zone interface
Courtesy: Facebook

But the fact that the Meta groping victim either did not think to use Safe Zone or could not access it is precisely the problem, says Cross.

The structural question is the big issue for me. Generally speaking, when companies address online abuse, their solution is to outsource it to the user and say, ‘Here, we give you the power to take care of yourselves.’

And that is unfair and doesn’t work. Safety should be easy and accessible, and there are lots of ideas for making this possible. To Stanton, all it would take is some sort of universal signal in virtual reality—perhaps Quivr’s V gesture—that could relay to moderators that something was amiss. Fox wonders if an automatic personal distance unless two people mutually agreed to be closer would help. And Cross believes it would be useful for training sessions to explicitly lay out norms mirroring those that prevail in ordinary life:

In the real world, you wouldn’t randomly grope someone, and you should carry that over to the virtual world.

Until we figure out whose job it is to protect users, one major step toward a safer virtual world is disciplining aggressors, who often go scot-free and remain eligible to participate online even after their behavior becomes known. “We need deterrents,” Fox says. That means making sure bad actors are found and suspended or banned. (Milian said Meta “[doesn’t] share specifics about individual cases” when asked about what happened to the alleged groper.)

Stanton regrets not pushing more for industry-wide adoption of the power gesture and failing to talk more about Belamire’s groping incident.

It was a lost opportunity. We could have avoided that incident at Meta.

If anything is clear, it’s this: There is no body that’s plainly responsible for the rights and safety of those who participate anywhere online, let alone in virtual worlds. Until something changes, the metaverse will remain a dangerous, problematic space.


AUTHOR COMMENTARY

[5] Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth; fornication, uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence, and covetousness, which is idolatry: [6] For which things’ sake the wrath of God cometh on the children of disobedience: [7] In the which ye also walked some time, when ye lived in them.

Colossians 3:5-7

This passage is good description of the metaverse as a whole, not just this “virtually groping.”

I would not be surprised if this “groping” was done intentionally by someone at Meta, just so the media and woke professors could pick up on this, to push an agenda. To me, it seemed so obvious from day one that amount of censorship that would be in place would FAR surpass what we face now; though, that seems to be lost on the masses, seeing it as an utopia to do whatever.

The agenda push is designed to create a pre-planned solution: social credit scores, something I have warned is coming, and this will be on full display in the metaverse.

The Coming “Global Citizen” Test That Will Be Mandated For People To Use The Internet

U.S.A’s Own Social Credit Score System Is Coming Soon


[7] Who goeth a warfare any time at his own charges? who planteth a vineyard, and eateth not of the fruit thereof? or who feedeth a flock, and eateth not of the milk of the flock? [8] Say I these things as a man? or saith not the law the same also? [9] For it is written in the law of Moses, Thou shalt not muzzle the mouth of the ox that treadeth out the corn. Doth God take care for oxen? [10] Or saith he it altogether for our sakes? For our sakes, no doubt, this is written: that he that ploweth should plow in hope; and that he that thresheth in hope should be partaker of his hope. (1 Corinthians 9:7-10).

The WinePress needs your support! If God has laid it on your heart to want to contribute, please prayerfully consider donating to this ministry. If you cannot gift a monetary donation, then please donate your fervent prayers to keep this ministry going! Thank you and may God bless you.

CLICK HERE TO DONATE

3 Comments

  • When I was lost and gaming even in my high school days online on computers, people would do weird groping things and asked lewd things and so on so forth. They would use numbers instead of letters and spell things differently in order to not get flagged.
    This is nothing new under the sun unfortunately and this stuff will always happen no matter what people try to do to stop it.

  • Man, I can’t, I just can’t. So in the metaverse you can grope or harass someone. Next there’ll be someone getting murdered in the metaverse. It’s all just the inner workings and interior of the MOTB system.

  • Good reason to never be a ‘user’. To never engage in that thing. Let alone give it space in & access to your brain soulish interface. Nope. Never. Nor to willingly take injections potentially making you more ‘conductive’ & easier to access.
    And for those who may witness the full on Blue Beam application of this thing…the attempt of men & devils to mock a rapture, or a ‘disclosure’ of all the antichrist gods & idols that ever were being suddenly seen, experienced, proven etc with voices heard inside the head (like they used to warn fishing boats out of the way of ships in the Persian Gulf etc), mass ‘visions’ ….archaeological discoveries ‘disproving’ Christ according to the scriptures….ready yourself now to receive no voice or instruction violating scripture or not originating within yourself. Read your Bible & pray continually, getting used to speaking with God & knowing his still small voice & guidance through the scripture. He’s not going to ‘demote’ you for trying the spirits. He told us these things would come….and when we weren’t expecting them. We just presumed & fell to the Disney delusion as surely as Lot was coarsened & influenced by Sodom, even as he was vexed by it….for which a judgment is coming. Jesus said, Remember Lot’s wife. She & his daughters were more than a little influenced by Sodom. Those who are spared & repent, drawn out, don’t have to run hide in caves & holes in the earth like he did, or stop short at ‘some little one’ like Zoar barely outside the walls.

    It will make you a target. Those of us elders who were deceived & failed in these matters should be the loudest & most ready to call these things out. Drawing fire, making a way of escape for another generation to survive to preach the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ according to the scriptures to those only hearing a godman, Aryan, papist, ascending master antichrist ‘Christianity’ preached, should the Lord tarry.

Leave a Comment

×