Beautiful Virgin Islands

Saturday, Mar 07, 2026

Facebook content moderators sue over psychological trauma

Facebook content moderators sue over psychological trauma

In the summer of 2017, Chris Gray walked into Facebook’s Dublin office for his first day of work as a content moderator.

“It's one of these very trendy, California-style open offices. Bright yellow emojis painted on the wall,” Gray said. “It's all very pretty, very airy, seems very cool.”

Gray wasn’t a Facebook employee. He was a contractor hired by CPL Resources PLC in Dublin, one of several outsourcing firms Facebook works with to moderate content on its platform. He took the job hoping to move up the ranks and eventually work for Facebook. But that never happened. Instead, Gray says, the nine months he spent at CPL Resources left him with lasting psychological trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Gray and several other former contractors are now suing CPL Resources and Facebook in Ireland’s High Court over the psychological trauma they say they endured because of poor training and lack of adequate mental health resources on the job. The lawsuit, which was filed last week, is bringing new scrutiny to the content moderation ecosystem that Facebook and other platforms rely on to police what gets posted on their platforms.

Gray started working as a content moderator in July 2017. He was one of the thousands hired to moderate flagged content on Facebook following a series of high-profile incidents. In April 2017, a Cleveland, Ohio man uploaded a video of himself gunning down an elderly stranger on the street. It stayed on Facebook for hours. Within days, a man in Thailand livestreamed the murder of his baby daughter on Facebook Live.

Facebook was scrambling to prove it was taking steps to keep posts like this off the site and in May, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced his company would be adding 3,000 new members to the team of people who moderate content for Facebook. (Today, there are about 15,000 people around the world who review content for Facebook, according to a company spokesperson.)

Related: Facebook wants to create a 'Supreme Court' for content moderation. Will it work?

At first, Gray’s job was to keep pornography off the site. When a user or Facebook’s technology flagged a post that seemed to be in violation of Facebook’s “Community Standards,” it would go to Gray, or to someone else on his team who would review the video, photo or text and decide what to do with it - take it down, mark it with a warning or leave it up.

“After a few months, I was moved to the high-priority queue, which is hate speech, graphic violence, bullying. Really all the nasty stuff you want to act on very quickly,” Gray said. “I really don't like to talk in detail about [the things I was reviewing, but it included] executions. Terrorists beheading people. Ethnic cleansing in Myanmar. Bestiality. I mean, you name it. All the worst of humanity, really.”

On busy days, Gray would walk into work to find 800 of these posts waiting in his queue. On good days, it was closer to 200. He had to sift through quickly, but also carefully because Facebook was auditing the decisions he was making - and keeping a score. Gray was working 37.5 hours a week, making about $14 per hour.

Gray was under a strict nondisclosure agreement and therefore was not speaking with friends and family about the disturbing things he was seeing at work. It wasn't until a whole year after he left the company during a meeting with a journalist at a coffee shop that Gray says he opened up about the work he did for Facebook.

“This was the first time I'd ever talked about all the horrible stuff I had to see. I never even discussed it with my wife. And I literally broke down and cried in a coffee shop. And I was absolutely shocked. I was bewildered. I just did not know what was happening to me,” he said.

This incident prompted Gray to go see a doctor. He was diagnosed with PTSD.

CPL Resources did not respond to several interview requests on the lawsuit.

Through a statement provided to The World, Facebook wrote, “We recognize this review work can be difficult, and we work closely with our partners to ensure that the people who do this work are supported. We require everyone who reviews content for Facebook go through an in-depth, multi-week training program on our Community Standards and have access to extensive psychological support to ensure their wellbeing.

“This includes 24/7, on-site support with trained practitioners, an on-call service, and access to private healthcare from the first day of employment. We are also employing technical solutions to limit their exposure to graphic material as much as possible. This is an important issue, and we are committed to getting this right.”

Sean Burke, another former contractor who is suing, says that he did not receive the training and support Facebook claims its partners provide to workers. Burke started working for CPL Resources in 2017.

“On the first day, one of my first tickets was watching someone being beaten to death with a plank of wood with nails on it,” he said. “Within my second week on the job, it was my first time ever seeing child porn.”

Burke says he saw videos of people being decapitated and people committing suicide. Not everything he was reviewing was this disturbing, but these posts stuck with him.

Burke was working the night shift. He'd come in to hundreds of posts every day. Do his work, get home around 3 or 4 in the morning, and try to get some sleep. When he finally did, he'd have nightmares about the things he saw on his computer screen at work.

“You're seeing the worst that humanity has to offer, and you just become completely disheartened,” he said.

Burke felt like he needed help and support, so he paid a visit to the CPL Resources’ Wellness Center. They offered yoga, finger-painting classes, and people he could talk to.

“Unfortunately…they can't do anything to help you cope or manage with the material or the environment,” Burke said. “They're kind of just, there's a shoulder to lean [on] and cry on.”

Burke sought outside help and was prescribed anxiety medication, which he says helped him cope. But his accuracy rating fell below 98, and CPL Resources did not extend his contract. (Remember, every decision he made was audited to assess whether he did a good enough job applying Facebook's rules - rules that Burke says were complicated and constantly evolving).

Facebook has said it wants to eventually automate most of this crucial content moderation work - to have it done by sophisticated algorithms. But the technology isn't there yet. In the meantime, Cori Crider, who’s with the London-based nonprofit Foxglove, and is assisting with the lawsuit, says she wants better conditions for the humans doing the work.

Facebook and other social media platforms could not exist without the labor that these people provide,” she said. “It would be unusable. You wouldn't touch it. You wouldn't set foot in it because it would just be awash in abuse and pornography and violence. And the people who are on the front lines of this battle making the platforms a place that's [usable] for us all - they're really paying the price right now.”

Crider wants Facebook and its partners to provide better mental health support to employees, and to limit how much toxic content moderators are exposed to.

“If you think, for example, about police investigating child abuse cases here in the UK, they all have…very serious psychological support and actually limits on the amount of time they're permitted to be exposed to that stuff,” Crider said. “So, if [Facebook] had just taken a little bit closer look at comparative examples of other people who do this sort of work, they could've done better.”

Gray agrees. But he says that figuring out the best way to keep the internet and the people who moderate it safe is not easy.

“It's an incredibly complex task,” Gray said. “And I don't think Facebook should be ashamed that they haven't got it right yet. I think they just need to say, ‘OK, we're learning. We're doing our best. We've made mistakes. And it appears that some people have suffered as a result of those mistakes. And we're going to make that right.’”

Newsletter

Related Articles

Beautiful Virgin Islands
0:00
0:00
Close
Starmer Defends UK Role in Iran Conflict After Renewed Criticism from President Trump
Blue Owl Reveals £36 Million Exposure After Collapse of UK Lender Serving Wealthy Clients
UK Asylum Reform Plan Triggers Fierce Debate Over Border Control and Humanitarian Impact
US Stealth Bombers Head to UK Base as Trump Issues Stark Warning to Iran
UK Deputy Prime Minister Says Legal Case Could Exist for British Strikes on Iranian Missile Sites
Investigators Link Mysterious Parcel Fires Across Europe to Russian Intelligence Operation
Debate Intensifies Over Britain’s Legal Justification for US Military Operations Launched From UK Bases
Britain Faces Heightened Energy Price Risks as Iran-Linked Tensions Threaten Global Oil and Gas Supplies
British Counter-Terror Police Arrest Four Suspected of Spying on Jewish Community for Iran
Axel Springer Agrees $770 Million Deal to Acquire Britain’s Daily Telegraph
Iceland Supermarket Drops Trademark Challenge Against Icelandic Government in Long-Running Naming Dispute
UK Defence Secretary Visits Cyprus Following Scrutiny of Britain’s Response to Drone Attacks
Questions Grow Over Britain’s Military Readiness as Response to Iran Conflict Draws Scrutiny
UK Offers Failed Asylum Seeker Families Up to Forty Thousand Pounds to Leave Voluntarily
Saharan Dust Could Bring ‘Blood Rain’ to Parts of the UK as Weather Systems Shift
UK Deploys Additional Typhoon Fighter Jets to Qatar and Helicopters to Cyprus Amid Rising Middle East Tensions
Experts Urge Britain to Accelerate Renewable Energy Push as Global Conflicts Drive Up Costs
British Public Shows Strong Reluctance to Join Wider War in Iran
First UK Evacuation Flight Departs Middle East After Lengthy Delay
United Kingdom Imposes New Visa Requirements on Travelers from St. Lucia and Nicaragua
Iran Conflict Strains U.S.–U.K. Alliance as Trump and Starmer Clash Over Military Strategy
UK Interest Rates Could Rise Above Four Percent Again if Energy Shock Continues, Think Tank Warns
Starmer Defends Britain’s Iran Strategy as Badenoch Urges Stronger Military Support
Labour MP Says She Saw No Sign Husband Broke Law After Arrest in China Espionage Investigation
UK Jobless Rate Overtakes Italy’s for First Time in Years as Labour Market Weakens
United Kingdom Suspends Student Visas for Four Countries in Unprecedented Immigration Move
Campaigners Warn UK Student Visa Ban Could Push Migrants Toward Dangerous Channel Crossings
First U.K. Charter Flight for Stranded Nationals Set to Depart Oman Amid Middle East Crisis
France and United Kingdom Deploy Warships to Eastern Mediterranean as Middle East Conflict Escalates
U.K. Arrests Three Men Including Lawmaker’s Partner in Suspected China Espionage Investigation
Trump Says UK–US ‘Special Relationship’ Is Diminished Amid Middle East Dispute
UK Economic Forecasts Face Fresh Strain from Middle East Conflict and Rising Energy Costs
UK Reaffirms Close US Ties After Trump’s Public Criticism
Reeves Stresses Stability and Fiscal Discipline in UK Budget Update as Growth Outlook Shifts
UK Deploys Royal Navy Destroyer HMS Dragon to Cyprus After Drone Strike on RAF Base
Green Party Surges Past Labour in New UK Poll as Traditional Party Support Crumbles
Majority of Britons Oppose U.S. Use of UK Military Bases in Iran Conflict
UK Intensifies Evacuation Efforts from Oman, Working with Airlines to Boost Flight Capacity
Trump Condemns UK and Spain in Unusually Sharp Rift Over Iran Military Action
Trump Repeats UK Claims That Diverge from Verified Facts Amid Diplomatic Strain
UK Arrests Prominent Figures Linked to Epstein Network as Questions Mount Over US Action
Trump Says UK ‘Took Far Too Long’ to Approve Use of Airbases for Iran Strikes
Scope of Britain’s Role in the Expanding Middle East Conflict Comes Under Scrutiny
Trump Says He Is ‘Very Disappointed’ in Starmer Over Iran Comments
U.S. Embassy in Riyadh Struck by Drones Amid Escalating Iran Conflict
Starmer Confronts Strategic Test After Drone Strike Near British Base in Cyprus
Rolls-Royce Chief Signals Openness to Germany Joining UK-Led Fighter Jet Programme
UK Stocks Slip as Escalating Iran Conflict Triggers Global Market Selloff
UK Overhauls Asylum System to Make Refugee Status Temporary
Starmer Warns of ‘Reckless’ Iranian Strikes Amid Escalating Regional Tensions
×