FIFA Intensifies Crackdown on Online Abuse Targeting Players and Officials

Global body flags tens of thousands of abusive posts, alerts police across seven countries, and introduces blacklist for offenders

Sun Nov 16 2025
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Key points

  • FIFA reports a sharp rise in online abuse against players and officials
  • More than 30,000 abusive posts flagged to platforms in 2024; over 65,000 escalated since 2022
  • Eleven offenders from seven countries referred to law-enforcement in 2025, including one case sent to Interpol
  • FIFA begins blacklisting abusive individuals, barring them from buying tickets for future tournaments
  • SMPS service monitored 2,401 accounts, analysed 5.9 million posts, and flagged 179,517 messages during the 2024 Club World Cup
  • FIFA says football must remain a safe and inclusive space, both offline and online

Zurich: FIFA said on Sunday it had stepped up efforts to tackle online abuse directed at players and officials, reporting a surge in harmful content and referring more offenders to police.

Marking the International Day for Tolerance, FIFA said its Social Media Protection Service (SMPS) had flagged more than 30,000 abusive posts to platforms since the start of the year, part of more than 65,000 escalated since the tool was launched in 2022.

Eleven individuals in Argentina, Brazil, France, Poland, Spain, Britain and the United States have been reported to law-enforcement authorities in 2025 for abuse during FIFA competitions, with one case referred to Interpol.

The relevant national associations were alerted to allow follow-up action at local level.

FIFA said it was also blacklisting people identified as responsible for “highly abusive behaviour”, preventing them from purchasing tickets for future FIFA tournaments or events.

The SMPS has been deployed at several competitions this year, including the inaugural 32-team Club World Cup in the United States.

During that tournament, the service monitored 2,401 active accounts across five platforms, analysed 5.9 million posts, flagged 179,517 for review and reported 20,587 to the platforms.

“Football must be a safe and inclusive space — on the pitch, in the stands and online,” FIFA president Gianni Infantino said.

“Our message is clear: abuse has no place in our game, and we will continue to work with our Member Associations, the confederations and law-enforcement authorities to hold offenders accountable.”

According to Reuters, the SMPS uses a mix of technology and human moderation to detect, filter and block racist, discriminatory or threatening messages, while protecting players’ followers from exposure to abusive content.

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