10 Jan 2024

Meta to restrict more content for teens as regulatory pressure mounts

6:27 am on 10 January 2024
Facebook, WhatsApp, Messenger and Instagram icons displayed on a phone screen are seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on April 6, 2022. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto) (Photo by Jakub Porzycki / NurPhoto / NurPhoto via AFP)

Photo: AFP

Meta Platforms said on Tuesday it would hide more content from teens on Instagram and Facebook, after regulators around the globe pressed the social media giant to protect children from harmful content on its apps.

All teens will now be placed into the most restrictive content control settings on the apps and additional search terms will be limited on Instagram, Meta said in a blogpost.

The move will make it more difficult for teens to come across sensitive content such as suicide, self-harm and eating disorders when they use features like Search and Explore on Instagram, according to Meta.

The company said the measures, expected to be rolled out over the coming weeks, would help deliver a more "age-appropriate" experience.

Meta is under pressure both in the United States and Europe over allegations that its apps are addictive and have helped fuel a youth mental health crisis.

Attorneys general of 33 US states including California and New York sued the company in October, saying it repeatedly misled the public about the dangers of its platforms.

In Europe, the European Commission has sought information on how Meta protects children from illegal and harmful content.

The regulatory scrutiny increased following testimony in the US Senate by a former Meta employee who alleged the company was aware of harassment and other harms facing teens on its platforms but failed to act against them.

The employee, Arturo Bejar, called for the company to make design changes on Facebook and Instagram to nudge users toward more positive behaviours and provide better tools for young people to manage unpleasant experiences.

Bejar said on Tuesday that Meta's changes did not address his concerns. The company was relying on "'grade your own homework' definitions of harm" and still did not offer a way for a teen to easily report an unwanted advance.

"This should be a conversation about goals and numbers, about harm as experienced by teens," he told Reuters.

Children have long been an appealing demographic for brands that advertise on Facebook and Instagram, which hope to attract them as consumers at ages when they may be more impressionable and solidify brand loyalty.

Meta has been locked in a fierce competition with TikTok for young users in the past few years, as their usage of Facebook - an app once dominant among teens - steadily shrinks.

According to a Pew Research Centre survey conducted in 2023, 63 percent and 59 percent of US teens reported using TikTok and Instagram respectively, while only 33 percent said they used Facebook.

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