A “Mute White People” sticker appeared on Instagram, the Hill contributor Katie Pavlich noted on Monday.
The “unbothered” sticker featuring a megaphone with the words “mute white people” was available through Instagram stories as an option, but has allegedly been pulled from the platform since then.
It still can be easily found on the GIPHY website to which it was first uploaded by Refinery29, an outlet targeting a female audience, according to the Washington Examiner. The account also created similarly-fashioned stickers such as “Pay Black Women”, “Erasure”, “Defund the Police”, “Reparations$$$” and others that were made available on Instagram.
According to GIPHY’s website, it ensures that uploaded stickers “will always be fun and safe no matter where you see them, we have an enhanced moderation process for approving stickers into our library”.
“This is a permanent part of our moderation process and may impact the turnaround time for uploaded content to appear within the Sticker API (which powers partners such as Instagram)”, it states.
Some would argue that the website’s moderation process has failed, as the discovery of the GIF, described by Pavlich as a “mute white people button”, provoked a storm on Twitter. Many called the image an “unacceptable” expression of “racism” and questioned why Instagram initially allowed it to be available through its sticker pack.
“Okay, now they have crossed all possible limits. This is pure Nazism. I, as a white woman, will not accept being persecuted and taking my family hostage. If true i will be the first to exclude and report Instagram”, one social media user commented on the news.
“So racism is okay again?”, another person wondered.
The subsequent petition to remove the sticker from Instagram and other social media platforms, was then created on the Change.org website.
The development comes in a wake of Black Lives Matter protests which have been sweeping the world following the death of African-American George Floyd in Minneapolis at the end of May. The campaign behind BLM highlights alleged instances of police brutality across the United States and the world, as well as an attempt to give a wider platforms to “marginalized” voices of people of colour.