Facebook Users Protest Breastfeeding Policy

Angry mothers protested Facebook's continued removal of pictures depicting breastfeeding this weekend with real-life and online protests.

Legislation may have cleared the way for women to breastfeed in public in the vast majority of U.S. states, but on the wild wild west of the Internet, Facebook remains forbidden territory for pictures of the natural deed. The company’s long-standing policy of removing breastfeeding photos has been drawing steady opposition, though, resulting in real-life and virtual protests last week from women who demand the right to bare all with baby on the Web.

The group “Hey Facebook, Breastfeeding is Not Obscene,” formed last year after Facebook removed pictures of mother Kelli Roman nursing her daughter. Though it has gained steam through the Web, now boasting over 75,000 members, the most vocal of its advocates took their angst to Facebook’s physical location on Saturday with a real-life protest in front of the company’s main headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif. Silicon Valley’s Mercury News reported a relatively small turnout, with the number of photographers rivaling the number of protestors, and Facebook execs apparently absent.

The protestors were joined online, though, by a larger number of mothers who chose to change their profile pictures to breast-feeding photos as a sign of virtual protest.

In Facebook’s defense, spokesman Barry Schnitt explained to the Washington Post that administrators only remove photos flagged by other users by obscene, and that it maintains the policy to keep the site safe for its audience of users aged 13 and up.

According to Schnitt, many breastfeeding photos are actually perfectly acceptable. “We take no action on the vast majority of breastfeeding photos because they follow the site’s Terms of Use,” Schnitt wrote. “Photos containing a fully exposed breast (as defined by showing the nipple or areola) do violate those Terms and may be removed.”

Though the protest group’s numbers rocketed from 50,000 to 75,000 in the days surrounding the protest, Facebook has so far shown no sign of actually changing its policies in response.

Showing 3 comments

  1. Ugh at 5:51pm 12th January 2009 Who cares? Breeders are so annoying.
  2. Sue at 4:44pm 29th December 2008 I'm with you, Peggy. We are socializing our children to believe that scantily clad Victoria's Secret models and Hooter's waitstaff are the norm, and that women feeding their babies their own milk is something strange. Keep swimming against the tide and one day the tide will turn. Few mothers even attempted breastfeeding when La Leche League was founded 50+ years ago, and now about 70% at least start at birth. That should be nearly 100%, but we're moving in the right direction.
  3. Peggy Woodward at 10:30am 29th December 2008 If only breastfeeding pictures were EVERYWHERE!!
    It would make my job as a midwife so much easier.
    I'm swimming against the current every day in trying to make breastfeeding, with all it's innumerable health advantages for mother and child,seem normal and achievable for women. We need breastfeeding pictures all over the place if we want more women to breastfeed successfully.How can we expect women to really feel that breastfeeding is 'natural' if what they see everywhere is bottle/formula feeding.
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