Remote Amazonian tribe reports aggressive sexual behaviour in young men after being exposed to internet

By Abby Amoakuh

Published Jun 5, 2024 at 05:17 PM

Reading time: 2 minutes

58548

If there’s one thing Elon Musk knows how to do, it’s ruin a good thing. First, the Tesla founder ruined a perfectly good social media platform with his Twitter—or should we say X—takeover. Then he took the fun out of space with his spacecraft manufacturer SpaceX. Now, Musk has decided to connect an isolated Amazonian tribe to the outside world with his satellite internet service Starlink. And the results of this latest decision have been… Interesting, to say the least.

Located in one of the most isolated stretches of the planet, the Marubo people, located around the Ituí River in Brazil, have long been one of the last communities without internet. However, after Musk decided to set up the community, which consists of approximately 2000 people, with high-speed internet nine months ago, things took a turn for the best and worst. 

One side of the coin has been that the connectivity is a blessing that has both underscored productivity and kept the community in touch with the rest of Brazil.

However, the Marubo people are now dealing with teenagers glued to phones. This addiction has now also fuelled group chats full of gossip, addictive social networks, interactions with online strangers, and minors watching excessive pornography.

Alfredo Marubo, leader of a Marubo association of villages, told The New York Times that he was particularly worried about how the introduction of online pornography was affecting the tribe: “We’re worried young people are going to want to try it.”

The community leader went on to explain that young men were suddenly sharing explicit videos in group chats, which is an extraordinary development for a culture that frowns on kissing in public. Marubo further added that others had reported more aggressive sexual behaviour from young men.

“I think the internet will bring us much more benefit than harm,” Enoque Marubo, another tribe leader, added, “at least for now.”

Nevertheless, the prospect of minors who are changing their behaviour based on online porn is quite disturbing.

X recently announced its new plans for allowing pornographic content, despite the fact that the platform is already struggling with content moderation.

The platform updated its guidelines to allow “consensually produced and distributed adult nudity or sexual behaviour” as long as it’s properly labelled and “not prominently displayed.”

X will still prohibit pornographic content that is exploitative, nonconsensual or promotes objectification, contains obscene behaviours or involves the sexualisation or harm to minors. The platform is also going to prevent adult content from being used for profile pictures, banners and other publicly visible places.

The decision still raised more than a couple of eyebrows since it is unclear how the platform will properly verify whether pornographic acts have been produced consensually, or whether all parties were aware of it being recorded.

Considering the new influx of young users with Musk’s expanding projects in developing countries, we can only assume that these concerns around content moderation will increase.

Keep On Reading

By Abby Amoakuh

Celebrity podcaster Bobbi Althoff comes forward as deepfake porn video of her goes viral

By Sam Wareing

An unlikely ally: Elon Musk promises Twitter to MrBeast if he ‘mysteriously’ dies

By Charlie Sawyer

How rediscovering Nintendogs as an adult has helped my anxiety

By Abby Amoakuh

Julia Fox reveals her ex-husband secretly baptised her son and warns women of loser fathers

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Did Chappell Roan push her assistant on the red carpet? We analyse the footage

By Eliza Frost

Everything you need to know about Trump’s state visit, including that Epstein projection

By Eliza Frost

Is the princess treatment TikTok trend the bare minimum or a relationship red flag?

By Eliza Frost

Will Belly choose herself in the final episodes of The Summer I Turned Pretty?

By Charlie Sawyer

Australian actor Joseph Zada cast as Haymitch Abernathy in upcoming Hunger Games prequel

By Charlie Sawyer

Everything you need to know about toxic gossip site Tattle Life and how its founder finally got revealed

By Eliza Frost

It now takes 20 hours of work a week to survive as a UK university student

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Keke Palmer’s past resurfaces amid backlash over Jonathan Majors podcast interview

By Abby Amoakuh

Sydney Sweeney calls wedding off and consciously uncouples from fiancé Jonathan Davino

By Alma Fabiani

Amazon Music is giving away 4 months free. Here’s how to claim it

By Charlie Sawyer

Introducing Berlin’s latest tourist attraction Cybrothel, where men can request AI sex dolls covered in blood

By Eliza Frost

Does the SKIMS Face Wrap actually work, or is it just another TikTok trap?

By Eliza Frost

American Eagle and Sydney Sweeney face backlash with employee’s LinkedIn post adding fuel to the fire

By Charlie Sawyer

Wednesday star Jenna Ortega reveals surprising dream role in recent interview

By Abby Amoakuh

Millie Bobby Brown and husband Jake Bongiovi face backlash for starring in ad promoting Dubai

By Eliza Frost

The Summer I Turned Pretty season 3 proves we’ll never be over love triangles