A series of reports by The Wall Street Journal are coinciding with increased scrutiny of Meta’s child safety measures in the EU and US.
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In a blog post published today, Meta says it’s expanding and updating its child safety features aimed at protecting kids — even as reports pile up about how its platforms recommend content sexualizing children.
Over the course of several months, The Wall Street Journal has detailed how Instagram and Facebook serve up inappropriate and sexual child-related content to users. In June, a report detailed how Instagram connects a network of accounts buying and selling child sexual abuse material (CSAM), guiding them to each other via its recommendations algorithm. A follow-up investigation published today shows how the problem extends to Facebook Groups, where there’s an ecosystem of pedophile accounts and groups, some with as many as 800,000 members.
In both cases, Meta’s recommendation system enabled abusive accounts to find each other, through features like Facebook’s “Groups You Should Join,” or autofilling hashtags on Instagram. Meta today said it will place limits on how “suspicious” adult accounts can interact with each other: on Instagram, they won’t be able to follow one another, won’t be recommended, and comments from these profiles won’t be visible to other “suspicious” accounts.
Meta also said it has expanded its list of terms, phrases, and emojis related to child safety and has begun using machine learning to detect connections between different search terms.
The reports and resulting child safety changes come at the same time as US and EU regulators press Meta on how it keeps kids on its platforms safe. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg — along with a slate of other Big Tech executives — will testify before the Senate in January 2024 on the issue of online child exploitation. In November, EU regulators gave Meta a deadline (that expires today) to provide information about how it protects minors; they sent Meta a new request today, specifically noting “the circulation of self-generated child sexual abuse material (SG-CSAM) on Instagram” and the platform’s recommendation system.
In late November, the dating app companies Bumble and Match suspended advertising on Instagram following The Journal’s reporting. The companies’ ads were appearing next to explicit content and Reels videos that sexualized children.