
As social media platforms come under increasing criticism and scrutiny over kid health and safety, Meta announced yesterday that it is expanding its content settings for teen accounts on its platforms Facebook, Instagram, and Messenger globally to ensure age-appropriate experiences for younger users joining the platforms.
The goal of the project, which was first introduced in a few nations in October of last year, was to keep kids from seeing offensive and harmful material supposed to be content. Additionally, Meta also revealed a new function on Instagram that aims to prevent kids from being repeatedly exposed to particular themes and diversify the content they see.
Investors also were cautioned by Meta in April that the legal and regulatory fallout from young social media issues in the US and the EU “could significantly impact our business and financial results.”
On March 25, a Los Angeles jury declared Meta and Alphabet’s Google responsible for creating social media platforms that are detrimental to youth in a historic trial. The jury awarded a total of $6 million to a 20-year-old woman who claimed she developed a social media addiction as a child.
In a statement from Meta, the default content settings for teen accounts are 13+, which screen out anything that is considered unsuitable for teenagers.
Meta further stated that later this year, Facebook and Messenger will also provide a “Limited Content” setting that offers an even more constrained experience.
Instagram tests a new feature to encourage a more balanced feed, which is also to prevent kids from seeing overwhelming quantities of specific content genres.
The team at Meta has recognised that some content, like posts about nutrition, weightlifting, or how to cope with anxiety, can also be helpful, but it should be balanced with other types of content rather than shown repeatedly.
The Instagram algorithm test goes alongside strict filtering. Instagram is piloting a feature to prevent algorithmic “rabbit holes” by artificially dampening repetitive themes, forcing the algorithm to deliver a more balanced, multi-faceted feed, even when topics like nutrition, coping with anxiety, and weightlifting can be beneficial, as Meta noted that repeated exposure to them may harm mental well-being.
This global deployment follows massive regulatory and legal pressure regarding youth digital wellness, including a landmark child safety lawsuit in which a Los Angeles jury found Meta and Google negligent, while Meta executives have warned investors that ongoing legal pushback in both the United States and the European Union could heavily disrupt future corporate revenue.
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