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Meta Probe Over Effect on Kids

Meta Probe - An investigation into Facebook and Instagram’s child protection measures as mounting concerns around minors’ use of social media.

The European Union has opened an investigation into Meta Platforms Inc., the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, over concerns that the platforms’ design and algorithms may be fostering addictive behavior in children, negatively impacting their mental health and well-being.

The key points are:

  • The EU has initiated formal proceedings against Meta under the Digital Services Act (DSA), suspecting violations related to protecting minors online.
  • Regulators are probing the potential “rabbit hole effect” where algorithms expose children to increasingly extreme or harmful content, creating addictive patterns.
  • The investigation will assess the effectiveness of Meta’s age verification methods and privacy safeguards for minors.
  • Concerns have been raised about the platforms’ design features and recommendation systems that could exploit children’s vulnerabilities and lead to behavioral addictions.
  • The EU had previously opened similar investigations into TikTok earlier this year over its potential addictive effects on children.
  • If found in breach of the DSA, Meta could face fines up to 6% of its global annual revenue and be required to modify its products.

 

The EU’s actions echo growing global scrutiny and regulatory efforts to protect children from the potential harms of social media platforms and their algorithms

If Meta is found in breach of the Digital Services Act (DSA), the potential penalties are severe:

  • Meta could face fines of up to 6% of its global annual revenue for the preceding financial year.Given Meta’s massive global revenue, this could amount to billions of dollars in fines.
  • Specifically, the EU Commission states that for Meta, fines up to 6% of worldwide annual turnover “would equate to around $8.5 billion.”
  • Beyond financial penalties, the EU Commission could require Meta to modify the design and functioning of Facebook and Instagram to remedy any violations related to protecting minors.
  • This could include mandating changes to their algorithms, age verification systems, privacy settings, and recommendation engines if they are found to be fostering addictive behaviors or failing to adequately safeguard children.

 

The Commission also has the power to impose interim measures or non-compliance decisions on Meta during the course of the investigation.

So in summary, Meta is facing potential multi-billion dollar fines as well as being forced to make substantial product changes, if regulators conclude the platforms have violated the DSA’s requirements around child protection and addictive design practices.

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