1、+FIFA WOMENS WORLD CUP AUSTRALIA&NEW ZEALAND 2023TM|SOCIAL MEDIA PROTECTION SERVICE/FULL TOURNAMENT ANALYSIS+CONTENTSContents.2Introduction.3SCOPE+PROCESSScope+Methodology.4SMPS Coverage 2022-23.5MONITORING+REPORTINGBreakdown of Findings.6Geographic Location.7Monitoring:Key Stats+Insights.8Real Worl
2、d Action.9INSIGHTS+LEARNINGSTargeted Players(by Nationality).10Detected Abuse Timeline.11MODERATIONModeration Activities.12FIFA WOMENS WORLD CUP FINAL 2023TMWorld Cup Final Analysis.13Comparative Analysis.14FIFA SOCIAL MEDIA PROTECTION SERVICEWOMENS WORLD CUP 2023TM ANALYSISMENTAL HEALTH EFFECTSThe
3、Mental Health Toll on Players.15LEARNINGS+NEXT STEPSLearnings+Future Events.16SMPS SCOPE+FIFA STATUTESFIFA Statutes+Glossary.172+INTRODUCTIONThis report represents a summary analysis of all monitoring and moderation activities carried out by FIFAs Social Media Protection Service(SMPS)across FIFA Wom
4、ens World Cup Australia&New Zealand 2023TM.The data and insights in this document were gathered from Wednesday 19th July through to Monday 21st August 2023,incorporating 64 fixtures of FIFA Womens World Cup 2023TM.The report covers SMPS activities across all major platforms including X(formerly Twit
5、ter),Instagram,Facebook,TikTok and YouTube,and is supplementary to the daily reports provided to FIFA across the tournament.FIFA SOCIAL MEDIA PROTECTION SERVICEWOMENS WORLD CUP 2023TM ANALYSIS5.1mposts/comments analysedposts/comments verified as abusive reported to platforms7,085posts/comments flagg
6、ed by Threat Matrix AI and reviewed by humans103kunique accounts detected sending abusive posts/comments 5.8kLaunched in 2022,FIFAs Social Media Protection Service has covered the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022TM and five other FIFA affiliated tournaments leading up to the FIFA Womens World Cup 2023TM.Th