The made in India Pixstory app will take the center-stage at the upcoming much-anticipated Arsenal vs Manchester United game at the Emirates stadium on Sunday.
NBA star and Pixstory brand ambassador Dwight Howard will kick off proceedings with a pitch for a cleaner social media. This will be followed by more than 50,000 fans in the stadium using Pixstory clappers to make some noise and raise awareness against online hate.
In attendance will be global honchos from the corporate world including Amit Mittal, former special advisor to President Joe Biden, Yosuke Sasaki, Softbank chief of staff, and Cara Sweeney, senior Coca Cola official. They will be joined by top journalists, including Variety Executive Editor Steven Gaydos and Athletic Senior Editor Kevin Coulson.
Arsenal is perched comfortably at the top of the EPL table and is the frontrunner to win the Premier League this year. And thanks to its winning partnership with Pixstory, fans have another reason to cheer with an app that provides a new way to engage with each other online without having to worry about hate speech. Using cutting-edge AI, Pixstory’s algorithms filter out hate speech, promoting decency in conversations and breaking the echo chambers that have formed on social media.
Apart from Arsenal, more marquee clubs including Juventus and PSG Feminines have partnered with Pixstory in the mission to build a better social media space. The app is collaborating with the Oxford Internet Institute on research towards building a safer and more collaborative social platform.
The brains behind Pixstory include Chris Mattmann, Chief Technology Officer at NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and inventor of Apache Tika, a framework for content detection and analysis.
The app’s global board includes Peter Watson, former chief of US International Development Finance Corporation; Koji Tsuruoka, Japan’s former ambassador to the UK; and Cody Keenan, former speechwriter for President Barack Obama, among other illustrious personalities.
Sports is an arena which is grappling with player abuse online. French footballers, including Kylian Mbappe, were hit by racist and hateful comments on social networks during the Fifa World Cup in Qatar. A staggering 92% of the English women’s team received targeted hate speech on social media during Euro 2022. In the world of sports marred by online hate and racism, Pixstory provides an alternative. As clean energy is a response to climate change, clean social is Pixstory’s response to online toxicity. With close to a million users already spread across 120 countries, Pixstory is a beacon of hope, building trust online in a new way.