Researchers claim Instagram prioritises sexy photos
A STUDY by the European Data Journalism Network and Algorithmwatch found that Instagram’s algorithm “prioritises photos of scantily-clad men and women”, and its researchers claimed that users are more likely to see sexy images in their news feed and that the constant exposure to this type of content will also affect the behaviour of content creators.
In the study titled Undress Or Fail: Instagram’s Algorithm Strongarms Users Into Showing Skin, researchers asked 26 volunteers to install a browser add-on and follow the account of selected professional content creators.
“We selected 37 professionals (14 of them men) from 12 countries who use Instagram to advertise brands or to acquire new clients for their businesses, mostly in food, travel, fitness, fashion or beauty sectors,” the research stated.
The add-on automatically opens the user’s Instagram homepage at regular intervals and tracks which posts appear on top of the volunteers’ news feed, said the researchers, explaining that this gives them an overview of what the platform considers most relevant.
In between February and May, a total of 1,737 posts containing 2,400 photos were published by the selected content creators.
“Of these posts, 362 or 21% were recognised by a computer program as containing pictures showing women in bikinis or underwear or bare chested men,” the organisation said.
Posts with such pictures made up of 30% of all posts from the same accounts, as some appeared more than once in the volunteers’ news feed.
Posts with pictures of women in undergarments or bikinis were 54% more likely to appear in the news feed of volunteers, while posts containing pictures of bare chested men were 30% more likely to be shown.
“By contrast, posts showing pictures of food or landscape were about 60% less likely to be shown in the news feed,” it said.
However, the researchers also admitted that the push towards nudity may not apply to all Instagram users.
“While it was consistent and apparent for most volunteers, a small minority were served posts that better reflected the diversity published by content creators,” the organisation said.
While it’s likely for Instagram’s algorithm to “favour nudity in general”,
personalisation and other factors may limit this effect on some users, researchers said, adding that without access to Facebook’s internal data and production servers, it will be impossible to draw a definitive conclusion.
Instagram’s parent company Facebook responded to the research in a statement, calling it “flawed”.
“This research is flawed in a number of ways and shows a misunderstanding of how Instagram works. We rank posts in your feed based on content and accounts you have shown an interest in, not on arbitrary factors like the presence of swimwear,” Facebook said in the statement.
The researchers countered that claim by explaining that in 2015, Facebook published a patent revealing that its news feed could select what photos to prioritise to users. Some of the factors that helps to determine prioritisation include gender, ethnicity and “state of undress”.
“While Instagram claims that the news feed is organised according to what a given user ‘cares about most’, the company’s patent explains that it could actually be ranked according to what it thinks all users care about,” the organisation said.
The researchers also expressed concern that the algorithm may compel content creators to show skin if they want to achieve a significant reach on the platform, saying that the effect “could be larger for females” and be considered as a form of discrimination for female entrepreneurs.
“Which photos are shown and which are not is not just a matter of taste. Entrepreneurs who rely on Instagram to acquire clients must adopt the norms the service encourages to reach their followers,” it said.
“Even if these norms do not reflect the values they built their businesses on, or those of their core audience and clients.”