Daisi Jo Pollard Sepulveda
Los Angeles, ca – 14 August 2025 – Daisi Jo Pollard Sepulveda, the much -praised former Miss Jamaica International, model, runner, entrepreneur, and heir to Land and Oil van Texas, has today announced the manner of the community of the community. The suspension, which has occurred without prior warning, is linked to the automated algorithms of Meta that incorrectly overflows its content that is aimed at increasing consciousness on child abuse-a very personal cause of Sepulveda, who is a child abuse survivor. This incident emphasizes a broader pattern of algorithmic bias that victims, in particular women, make a disproportionate silence, while controversial celebrities can share unscathed stories.
Sepulveda’s account, Boasting A Dedicated Following Built over Years of Empowering Content On Beauty, Fitness, Business, And Personal Resilience, Vanished Overnight, Prompting Her to submit an Appeal On July 31, 2025. As of Today, TODAYTAITE That if the account is found non-compliant, it will be permanently disabled without Further Appeal Options. “This is not just about losing a platform-It is about punished for survival and pronouncing,” said Sepulveda. “As a child abuse survivor, I used Instagram to make contact with women worldwide, to share my journey to inspire healing and prevention. The algorithm of Meta is essentially revicting me by comparing my empowerment story with exploitation.”
The core problem lies in the opaque and defective algorithmic Meta algorithmic, which is highly dependent on AI to detect violations such as ‘Child Exploitation’. Although intended to protect users, these tools cannot often make a distinction between harmful content and testimonies of survivors, especially when messages to traumas from the past or photos of children use illustrative. The case of Sepulveda reflects that of influencer Erika Cramer, known as the ‘queen of trust’, whose report was temporarily suspended in June 2025 for similar reasons. Cramer, also a survivor of child abuse, was accused of exploiting children, despite its content aimed at lawyers for mental health and personal recovery. “I am accused of something I was the victim of when I was a child,” Cramer explained in media interviews, which underlined the ironic cruelty of such flags.
This targeting has a profound influence on individuals, in particular women who use social media to bring awareness for child abuse and a worldwide crisis that influences millions. By deactivating reports without human assessment, meta vital conversations suppressed, insulates survivors of support networks and maintains a culture of silence. For women such as Sepulveda, who have converted personal pain into platforms for change, these forbidden means of existence, advocacy for mental health and community structure. “When I share my story about overcoming care providers, exploitation and resilience, I do not exploit someone; I enable others to break loose,” added Sepulveda. “Nevertheless, Meta’s system punishes us, so that victims are effectively silent the efforts to teach and protect future generations.”
The apparent inconsistency in the enforcement of meta is the worsening of frustration. Why are smaller influencers confronted with fewer than a million followers with fast deactivations for discussing the exploitation of children, while celebrities such as Oprah Winfrey can openly share flashbacks of their own traumas from childhood, including photos and detailed accounts without repercussion? Oprah’s discussions about her show and social media about her experiences with abuse have reached billions, but her platforms remain intact. This inequality suggests a bias that prefers verified, high-fold accounts, making daily lawyers vulnerable to algorithmic errors. “If Oprah is talking about children’s exploitation with children’s photos, will she be banned? Or is it only we-the entrepreneurs, models and survivors without the status of celebrities with a blue check?” interrogated Sepulveda. Such a selective moderation calls serious concerns about fairness, freedom of expression and the dedication of the platform to support marginalized voices.
In response to the deactivation, Sepulveda has launched a new Instagram account Instagram.com/Daisijopollard to continue its mission and followed to rebuild it on a community aimed at empowerment, fitness, entrepreneurship and abuse of consciousness. She calls on Meta to revise his algorithms with greater human supervision, context conscious AI and protection for surviving content. “We need transparency and fairness, not a system that revicts the vulnerable,” she emphasized.
Proponents are encouraged to follow Instagram.com/daisijopollard, to share their stories using #justiceforsurvivors and to contact Meta to demand a better policy.
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About Daisi Jo Pollard Sepulveda
Daisi Jo Pollard Sepulveda is a versatile trail blower: former Miss Jamaica International 2005, International Model, Avid Runner, successful entrepreneur and heir to Texas Land and Oil Legacies. As a survivor of child abuse, she devotes her platform to the powerful of women through stories about resilience, business insight and well -being. Follow her journey on instagram.com/daisijopollard.
This release is published on OpenPR.
