The report found that in 8,717 DMs analyzed, about one in 15 broke Instagram’s rules on abuse and harassment, including 125 examples of image-based sexual abuse.
“On Instagram, anyone can privately send you something that should be illegal,” Ms. Riley said in the report. “If they did it on the street, they’d be arrested.”
In studying the accounts that sent abusive messages, 227 of 253 remained active at least a month after they were reported. Forty-eight hours after they were reported, 99.6 percent of the accounts remained online. (Instagram said accounts are banned after three strikes, and lose the ability to send direct messages after a first strike.)
The report argued for stronger regulation, accusing Big Tech companies of being unable to regulate themselves. Their commitments to halting harassment were without teeth and secondary to the goal of profit, the report said.
In the meantime, women were left to work out their own coping strategies. Some choose to not engage with the direct messages, but Ms. Klinger said that was not an option for her, since she sometimes gets press requests to speak about her activism.
Ms. Heard said the experience, and the inability to do much about it, had increased her paranoia, indignation and frustration.
“Social media is how we connect with one another today and that medium is pretty much off limits to me,” she said in the report. “That’s the sacrifice I made, the compromise, the deal I made for my mental health.”