For 20 years, ISD has delivered field-leading threat detection, analysis and real-world strategies to combat terrorism, extremism and authoritarianism - in all their ideological forms.

Home / Reports / Toxic Tips: Misogynistic Narratives on TikTok in Hungary

Publications

February 6, 2025

Toxic Tips: Misogynistic Narratives on TikTok in Hungary

ISD UK

Misogyny

Charlotte Moeyens and Eva F. Hevesi

TikTok is an integral part of daily life for many young people,offering a broad range of content including life advice. However, ISD has identified misogynistic rhetoric in Hungarian-language love and relationship advice, a phenomenon previously observed in other languages. Content creators were found to normalise behaviours such as stalking and violence in relationships. They also often employed misogynistic tactics including slut-shaming, demonising women and perpetuating harmful gender stereotypes. Such content risks endangering the physical safety and mental health of women exposed to it.

Harmful content can be hard to identify as some anti-feminist creators use humour or personal stories to present misogynistic advice. Our analysis is among the first to examine online gender-based violence (OGBV) in Hungarian, highlighting the critical need to study and address hate and gender-based discrimination in less widely spoken languages.
This briefing is part of a series examining online gender-based violence (OGBV) on TikTok in English, German, French and Hungarian. It is part of the project Monitoring Online Gender-Based Violence Around the European Parliament Election 2024, funded by the German Federal Foreign Office.

In the media

Children are mimicking a hand gesture linked to misogynist influencer Andrew Tate

Study attempts to provide evidence linking misogyny to the incel movement

How misogynistic hate benefits from algorithms and propels through social media

ISD Contributors

Charlotte Moeyens
Senior Manager, Strong Cities