Meta has a fix for virtual groping in its social VR space, Horizon Worlds

The actual boundary will be invisible.
By Anna Iovine  on 
three metaverse avatars surrounded by personal boundary bubbles
Personal Boundaries in Meta will be invisible, unlike in this image. Credit: Meta

Horizon Worlds, Meta's (Facebook's) social virtual reality platform, is getting a new "Personal Boundaries" to help stop virtual groping after the app's beta testers faced harassment.

The Personal Boundary is a four-foot barrier between avatars designed to be always on by default. While the concept image portrays a bubble, the actual boundary will be invisible in Worlds.

diagram of four feet separation between avatars
Credit: Meta

What happens if someone tries to penetrate the boundary? The system will halt forward movement, Horizon Vice President Vivek Sharma explained in a blog post. There also won't be any haptic feedback in these situations, meaning the user won't feel like they've touched anything.

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Last December, a beta tester described being groped by a stranger in a Horizon group on Facebook. "Sexual harassment is no joke on the regular internet, but being in VR adds another layer that makes the event more intense," she wrote.

Sharma described the incident as "absolutely unfortunate," and said that the tester didn't use the safety features already built in Horizon Worlds. "That’s good feedback still for us because I want to make [the blocking feature] trivially easy and findable," he told The Verge at the time.

Presumably, Personal Boundary is Meta's way of bringing its safety features to the forefront. Whether this will actually stop harassment in the space, however, remains to be seen.

Topics Meta

anna iovine, a white woman with curly chin-length brown hair, smiles at the camera
Anna Iovine
Associate Editor, Features

Anna Iovine is associate editor of features at Mashable. Previously, as the sex and relationships reporter, she covered topics ranging from dating apps to pelvic pain. Before Mashable, Anna was a social editor at VICE and freelanced for publications such as Slate and the Columbia Journalism Review. Follow her on X @annaroseiovine.


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