Current:Home > InvestCourt documents underscore Meta’s ‘historical reluctance’ to protect children on Instagram -OceanicInvest
Court documents underscore Meta’s ‘historical reluctance’ to protect children on Instagram
Chainkeen View
Date:2025-04-10 07:05:12
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Newly unredacted documents from New Mexico’s lawsuit against Meta underscore the company’s “historical reluctance” to keep children safe on its platforms, the complaint says.
New Mexico’s Attorney General Raul Torrez sued Facebook and Instagram owner Meta in December, saying the company failed to protect young users from exposure to child sexual abuse material and allowed adults to solicit explicit imagery from them.
In the passages freshly unredacted from the lawsuit Wednesday, internal employee messages and presentations from 2020 and 2021 show Meta was aware of issues such as adult strangers being able to contact children on Instagram, the sexualization of minors on that platform, and the dangers of its “people you may know” feature that recommends connections between adults and children. But Meta dragged its feet when it came to addressing the issues, the passages show.
Instagram, for instance, began restricting adults’ ability to message minors in 2021. One internal document referenced in the lawsuit shows Meta “scrambling in 2020 to address an Apple executive whose 12-year-old was solicited on the platform, noting ‘this is the kind of thing that pisses Apple off to the extent of threating to remove us from the App Store.’” According to the complaint, Meta “knew that adults soliciting minors was a problem on the platform, and was willing to treat it as an urgent problem when it had to.”
In a July 2020 document titled “Child Safety — State of Play (7/20),” Meta listed “immediate product vulnerabilities” that could harm children, including the difficulty reporting disappearing videos and confirmed that safeguards available on Facebook were not always present on Instagram. At the time, Meta’s reasoning was that it did not want to block parents and older relatives on Facebook from reaching out to their younger relatives, according to the complaint. The report’s author called the reasoning “less than compelling” and said Meta sacrificed children’s safety for a “big growth bet.” In March 2021, though, Instagram announced it was restricting people over 19 from messaging minors.
In a July 2020 internal chat, meanwhile, one employee asked, “What specifically are we doing for child grooming (something I just heard about that is happening a lot on TikTok)?” The response from another employee was, “Somewhere between zero and negligible. Child safety is an explicit non-goal this half” (likely meaning half-year), according to the lawsuit.
Instagram also failed to address the issue of inappropriate comments under posts by minors, the complaint says. That’s something former Meta engineering director Arturo Béjar recently testified about. Béjar, known for his expertise on curbing online harassment, recounted his own daughter’s troubling experiences with Instagram.
“I appear before you today as a dad with firsthand experience of a child who received unwanted sexual advances on Instagram,” he told a panel of U.S. senators in November. “She and her friends began having awful experiences, including repeated unwanted sexual advances, harassment.”
A March 2021 child safety presentation noted that Meta is “underinvested in minor sexualization on (Instagram), notable on sexualized comments on content posted by minors. Not only is this a terrible experience for creators and bystanders, it’s also a vector for bad actors to identify and connect with one another.” The documents underscore the social media giant’s ”historical reluctance to institute appropriate safeguards on Instagram,” the lawsuit says, even when those safeguards were available on Facebook.
Meta, which is Menlo Park, California, has been updating its safeguards and tools for younger users as lawmakers pressure it on child safety, though critics say it has not done enough. Last week, the company announced it will start hiding inappropriate content from teenagers’ accounts on Instagram and Facebook, including posts about suicide, self-harm and eating disorders.
New Mexico’s complaint follows the lawsuit filed in October by 33 states that claim Meta is harming young people and contributing to the youth mental health crisis by knowingly and deliberately designing features on Instagram and Facebook that addict children to its platforms.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, along with the CEOs of Snap, Discord, TikTok and X, formerly Twitter, are scheduled to testify before the U.S. Senate on child safety at the end of January.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Sister Wives’ Meri Brown Details Her Dating Life After Kody Brown Breakup
- Encino scratched from Kentucky Derby, clearing the way for Epic Ride to join field
- Why Brian Kelly's feels LSU is positioned to win national title without Jayden Daniels
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Father of former youth detention center resident testifies against him in New Hampshire trial
- US judges have rejected a map that would have given Louisiana a new majority-Black House district
- Life sentence for gang member who turned northern Virginia into ‘hunting ground’
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Eight US newspapers sue ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and Microsoft for copyright infringement
Ranking
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Lincoln’s Civil War order to block Confederate ports donated to Illinois by governor and first lady
- Untangling Kendrick Lamar’s Haley Joel Osment Mix-Up on His Drake Diss Track
- Trump trial hears testimony from Keith Davidson, lawyer who represented Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- The ship that brought down a Baltimore bridge to be removed from collapse site in the coming weeks
- The ship that brought down a Baltimore bridge to be removed from collapse site in the coming weeks
- Former pirate Johnny Depp returns to the screen as King Louis XV. But will audiences care?
Recommendation
Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
Appalachian State 'deeply saddened' by death of starting offensive lineman
Rihanna Reveals Why Being a Boy Mom Helps Her Embrace Her Femininity
Georgia governor signs bill into law restricting land sales to some Chinese citizens
How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
US judges have rejected a map that would have given Louisiana a new majority-Black House district
Marjorie Taylor Greene threatens vote on ousting Mike Johnson after Democrats say they'll block it
Columbia protesters seize building as anti-war demonstrations intensify: Live updates