Soccer-FIFA says World Cup sees 13-fold surge in online abuse, 11% racially motivated


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group K - DR Congo v Uzbekistan - Atlanta Stadium, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. - June 27, 2026 General view of a FIFA World Cup logo on display inside the stadium before the match REUTERS/Claudia Greco

MIAMI, July 1 (Reuters) - ⁠FIFA's digital watchdogs uncovered 89,000 abusive posts on social media during the ⁠group stage of the World Cup, marking a 13-fold increase from the ‌2022 edition in Qatar, world soccer[s governing body said on Wednesday.

The alarming spike was recorded after FIFA's Social Media Protection Service (SMPS) scanned over six million posts and comments -- a 33% jump from 2022 -- with ​racial abuse accounting for 11% of all detected offensive ⁠messages.

The share of racially motivated attacks ⁠represents a 3% rise compared to the group stage in Qatar, with FIFA saying ⁠it ‌marked a "significant increase in the objectively worst, most offensive material" on social media platforms.

"Available to all teams, players, coaches and match officials participating at FIFA ⁠tournaments, SMPS protects them and their followers from experiencing ​discriminatory and offensive content," ‌FIFA said in a statement.

The SMPS uses a mix of technology and human ⁠moderation to detect, ​filter and block racist, discriminatory or threatening messages, while also protecting players' followers from exposure to abusive content.

FIFA said 225,000 posts were identified for human review, of which moderators verified ⁠89,000 posts as abusive and took action, with approximately ​1,000 accounts escalated for further investigation.

The expanded tournament format with 48 teams compared to 32 in Qatar has also played a role in the increased volume of content analysed, ⁠FIFA added.

The service's automated moderation tools also hid approximately 181,000 hateful comments from team accounts.

Meanwhile, over two million comments were moderated during the group stage, including spam and content from bots or fake accounts -- a four-fold increase from 2022.

"As part of the ​evolution of SMPS, the service also collates evidence for law ⁠enforcement," FIFA said.

"Over 100 examples have been identified which pass the legal thresholds for ​preparing legal case files against them."

Netherlands players Justin Kluivert, ‌Quinten Timber and Crysencio Summerville suffered racist ​abuse online after missing penalty kicks in the shootout defeat by Morocco in the last 32.

(Reporting by Rohith Nair in Miami; Editing by Ken Ferris)

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