Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Instagram faces investigat­ion

State AGs examine app’s effects on mental health of teens

- CECILIA KANG AND MIKE ISAAC

A bipartisan group of state attorneys general said Thursday that they had opened an investigat­ion into Meta, the company formerly known as Facebook, for promoting its social media app Instagram while knowing of mental and emotional harms caused by the service.

At least nine states are involved in the investigat­ion, including California, Florida, Kentucky, Massachuse­tts, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Tennessee and Vermont.

Massachuse­tts Attorney General Maura Healey, a leader of the investigat­ion, said the states were examining whether the company’s actions violated state consumer protection laws and put the public at risk.

“Facebook, now Meta, has failed to protect young people on its platforms and instead chose to ignore or, in some cases, double down on known manipulati­ons that pose a real threat to physical and mental health — exploiting children in the interest of profit,” Healey said.

The move comes after a trove of documents from former employee Frances Haugen detailed research inside of the social media company that suggested teenagers suffered body image issues when using Instagram.

Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson, another leader of the investigat­ion, said the states would examine the “the techniques utilized by Meta to increase the frequency and duration of engagement by young users and the resulting harms caused by such extended engagement.”

“When social media platforms treat our kids as mere commoditie­s to manipulate for longer screen time engagement & data extraction, it becomes imperative for state attorneys general to engage our investigat­ive authority under our consumer protection laws,” Peterson said in a tweet.

The states’ investigat­ion adds to building regulatory pressure on Meta and other tech giants.

Spanning tens of thousands of pages and gigabytes of data, The Facebook Papers show a company struggling to deal with many issues that come as a byproduct of its enormous scale and billions of users, spanning topics like misinforma­tion, addiction and manipulati­on of users around the world. Much of the informatio­n came in the form of detailed reports investigat­ing the issues, laid out by the company’s research division.

Meta has said the research efforts are intended to address the issues they pinpoint, with the aim of improving the company’s products and services.

In a statement Thursday, a representa­tive for Meta strongly disputed the claims made by the state attorneys general against Instagram.

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