Las Vegas Review-Journal

Meta designed platforms to hook kids, reports say

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SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook parent Meta Platforms deliberate­ly engineered its social platforms to hook kids and knew — but never disclosed — it had received millions of complaints about underage users on Instagram but only disabled a fraction of those accounts, according to a newly unsealed legal complaint described in reports from The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times.

The complaint, originally made public in redacted form, was the opening salvo in a lawsuit filed in late October by the attorneys general of 33 states.

Company documents cited in the complaint described several Meta officials acknowledg­ing the company designed its products to exploit shortcomin­gs in youthful psychology such as impulsive behavior, susceptibi­lity to peer pressure and the underestim­ation of risks, according to the reports.

Others acknowledg­ed Facebook and Instagram also were popular with children under age 13 who, per company policy, were not allowed to use the service.

Meta said in a statement to The Associated Press that the complaint misreprese­nts its work over the past decade to make the online experience safe for teens, noting it has “over 30 tools to support them and their parents.”

With respect to barring younger users from the service, Meta argued age verificati­on is a “complex industry challenge.”

Instead, Meta said it favors shifting the burden of policing underage usage to app stores and parents, specifical­ly by supporting federal legislatio­n that would require app stores to obtain parental approval whenever youths under 16 download apps.

One Facebook safety executive alluded to the possibilit­y that cracking down on younger users might hurt the company’s business in a 2019 email, according to the Journal report.

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