The issue came to lightweight following a BBC investigation during which it used Facebook's "report howeverton" to spotlight sexual pictures but found that quite eightieth of that content wasn't removed.
The social media big replied with an automatic response language they didn't breach "community standards".
According to a report within the Telegraph on Tuesday, the photographs enclosed under-16s in sexualised poses, pages aimed toward paedophiles and a picture showing to be taken from a baby abuse video.
As per Facebook's community standards, "sexually suggestive content" can not be printed on the platform.
When a number of the photographs were sent to Facebook to spotlight the difficulty, the Menlo Park-headquartered company rumored the journalists WHO brought them to the company's attention to police for sharing the images, the report aforesaid.
Facebook later issued an announcement language, "It is against the law for anyone to distribute pictures of kid exploitation".
Meanwhile, Children's Commissioner for European country Anne Longfield aforesaid she was "very disappointed" by the revelations.
"Facebook's failure to get rid of outlaw content from its web site is appalling and violates the agreements they need in situ to guard kids," aforesaid National Society for the interference of Cruelty to kids (NSPCC) in GB.
In response, Simon Milner, WHO is Facebook's Policy Director in GB, has told the Telegraph that the corporate has rigorously reviewed the content mentioned them and removed all things that were outlaw or against the company's standards.

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