Meta designed platforms to get children addicted,
court documents allege
Instagram and Facebook parent company also knowingly
allowed underage users to hold accounts, unsealed legal complaint says
Kari Paul
and agencies
Mon 27 Nov
2023 19.18 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2023/nov/27/meta-instagram-facebook-kids-addicted-lawsuit
Instagram
and Facebook parent company Meta purposefully engineered its platforms to
addict children and knowingly allowed underage users to hold accounts,
according to a newly unsealed legal complaint.
The
complaint is a key part of a lawsuit filed against Meta by the attorneys
general of 33 states in late October and was originally redacted. It alleges
the social media company knew – but never disclosed – it had received millions
of complaints about underage users on Instagram but only disabled a fraction of
those accounts. The large number of underage users was an “open secret” at the
company, the suit alleges, citing internal company documents.
In one
example, the lawsuit cites an internal email thread in which employees discuss
why a 12-year-old girl’s four accounts were not deleted following complaints
from the girl’s mother stating her daughter was 12 years old and requesting the
accounts to be taken down. The employees concluded that “the accounts were
ignored” in part because representatives of Meta “couldn’t tell for sure the
user was underage”.
The
complaint said that in 2021, Meta received over 402,000 reports of under-13
users on Instagram but that 164,000 – far fewer than half of the reported
accounts – were “disabled for potentially being under the age of 13” that year.
The complaint noted that at times Meta has a backlog of up to 2.5m accounts of
younger children awaiting action.
The
complaint alleges this and other incidents violate the Children’s Online
Privacy and Protection Act, which requires that social media companies provide
notice and get parental consent before collecting data from children.
The lawsuit
also focuses on longstanding assertions that Meta knowingly created products
that were addictive and harmful to children, brought into sharp focus by
whistleblower Frances Haugen, who revealed that internal studies showed
platforms like Instagram led children to anorexia-related content. Haugen also
stated the company intentionally targets children under the age of 18.
Company
documents cited in the complaint described several Meta officials acknowledging
the company designed its products to exploit shortcomings in youthful
psychology, including a May 2020 internal presentation called “teen
fundamentals” which highlighted certain vulnerabilities of the young brain that
could be exploited by product development.
The
presentation discussed teen brains’ relative immaturity, and teenagers’
tendency to be driven by “emotion, the intrigue of novelty and reward” and
asked how these asked how these characteristics could “manifest . . . in
product usage”.
Meta said
in a statement 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 like Google and Apple, 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.
But a year
later, the same executive expressed frustration that while Facebook readily
studied the usage of underage users for business reasons, it didn’t show the
same enthusiasm for ways to identify younger kids and remove them from its
platforms.
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