A artisan picks up trash in front of a new logo and the name ‘Meta’ on the sign in front of Facebook headquarters on October 28, 2021 in Menlo Deposit, California.
Justin Sullivan | Getty Images
WASHINGTON — A new legal filing about child exploitation on Meta‘s Facebook and Instagram apps asserts a 2021 internal company estimate found as many as 100,000 children every day received sexual harassment, such as visualizes of adult genitalia, on the platforms.
This was revealed in newly unredacted portions of a complaint from the attorney general of New Mexico in an unfolding lawsuit against the social media giant over the company’s steps to protect children online as the platforms blow ones top in popularity with young people.
Also included in the complaint is a description of a 2020 Meta internal company gab, in which one employee asked a colleague: “What specifically are we doing for child grooming (something I just heard far that is happening a lot on TikTok)?”
“Somewhere between zero and negligible,” the colleague responded. “Child safety is an explicit non-goal this half.”
That unvarying year, Meta executives scrambled to respond to a complaint from an executive at Apple, whose 12-year-old child was begged on Facebook, according to the newly unredacted filing.
“This is the kind of thing that pisses Apple off to the extent of minatory to remove us from the App store,” a Meta employee told his colleagues. The same employee also asked when, “we’ll be over adults from messaging minors on (Instagram) Direct.”
A Meta spokesperson said the company has fixed many of the fine kettle of fish identified in the complaint. In one month alone, the company said, it disabled more than a half million accounts for dishonouring child safety policies.
“We want teens to have safe, age-appropriate experiences online, and we have over 30 mechanisms to support them and their parents. We’ve spent a decade working on these issues and hiring people who have yielded their careers to keeping young people safe and supported online. The complaint mischaracterizes our work using discriminatory quotes and cherry-picked documents,” the company said.
The lawsuit alleges that Facebook and Instagram failed to protect underage purchasers from predators online, and that Meta employees urged the company to make safety changes that the players did not implement.
The suit, filed Dec. 5, alleges that the company refused to make the recommended changes because it placed a ripe priority on increased social media engagement and advertising growth than on child safety. Meta founder and CEO Sign Zuckerberg is named as a defendant.
Mark Zuckerberg told the world in October 2021 that he was rebranding Facebook to Meta as the throng pushes toward the metaverse.
Facebook | via Reuters
“For years, Meta employees tried to sound the alarm about how decisions deliver the goods a succeeded by Meta executives subjected children to dangerous solicitations and sexual exploitation,” New Mexico Attorney General Raul Torrez voted Thursday.
“Meta executives, including Mr. Zuckerberg, consistently made decisions that put growth ahead of children’s safe keeping. While the company continues to downplay the illegal and harmful activity children are exposed to on its platforms, Meta’s internal materials and presentations show the problem is severe and pervasive,” said Torrez.
Meta has long faced criticism surrounding its deal with of problematic content targeting younger users. In 2021, whistleblower Frances Haugen leaked internal documents to the Exasperate Street Journal showing that the company knew of the harm caused to teenage girls by toxic content on Instagram, but did nothing to fix the pretty pickle.
Haugen later testified before a Senate panel, where she faced questions from outraged lawmakers who were upset that the company was putting profits over the safety of users.