Instagram Kids, a modified version of the app with additional parental controls, has been in the works for a while. But before it could see the light of day, Facebook dropped the project, saying in a statementMonday that building an Instagram for people under 13 years old is "the right thing to do" but, apparently, just not right now.
Instead of focusing on Instagram Kids, the platform promised to use this time to "work with parents, experts and policymakers to demonstrate the value and need for this product" and build in parental supervision tools for teens.
This comes just weeks after a barrage of news stories were released detailing Instagram's failure to keep young people safe on the app, particularly teenage girls. According to an internal report obtained by the Wall Street Journal, Facebook knew that Instagram had detrimental effects on young women's mental health, but didn't make that research public or offer any solutions to the problem it had created.
Instagram head Adam Mosseri said in a statement that he doesn't agree with how the Wall Street Journalreported on the research but didn't deny any facts from the story, saying the research was done simply to make the platform better. Last week, also after the bombshell report, Instagram announced it's working on two new ideas: encouraging users to look at other content when it appears they're dwelling on things that might encourage negative social comparison and a separate tool to encourage users to "take a break" from the app.
"I have three children and their safety is the most important thing in my life," Mosseri said. "I hear the concerns with this project, and we’re announcing these steps today so we can get it right."
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said at a congressional hearing in Marchthat there are already a "large number of people under the age of 13 who would want to use a service like Instagram" but aren't authorized to do so because of federal privacy laws. So, kids are lying about their age to sign onto the app at younger ages. And that seems to be true: According to a report from the nonprofit Thorn, 40 percent of kids surveyed under the age of 13 already use Instagram. An Instagram Kids platform is basically the social media equivalent of "if you're going to do it, I'd rather you do it in the house" parenting.
"We firmly believe that it’s better for parents to have the option to give their children access to a version of Instagram that is designed for them — where parents can supervise and control their experience — than relying on an app’s ability to verify the age of kids who are too young to have an ID," the platform said in its statement.
Critics, though, argued that Instagram Kids was a blatant attempt by the media giant to engage children at a younger age. A lot of people hated the idea, kids included.
While there are platforms that have versions of their apps for young people, including TikTok and YouTube, not all companies think it's a good idea. Alexis Ohanian, who co-founded Reddit, tweeted that the move to pause Instagram Kids was "a good move."
Tweet may have been deleted
Instagram for Kids was "a bad idea from day one," said Jim Steyer, the founder and CEO of Common Sense Media, an organization that advocates for safe technology for children, in a statement. He added that the platform only cares about "hooking kids when they are most vulnerable, keeping them on the platform and getting access to as much of their personal data as possible."
"This is their business model that generates billions of dollars and they are not going to jeopardize that," Steyer said. "This is why advocates, policymakers, and parents have to continue to keep the spotlight on Facebook and hold them accountable."
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Facebook pauses Instagram Kids because it was actually a bad idea-蜻蜓点水网
sitemap
文章
18
浏览
91
获赞
5
Phoenix Suns' Eric Bledsoe inspires hair salon meme after bitter tweet
When Phoenix Suns' point guard Eric Bledsoe got in trouble over a tweet, he tried to use a trip to tPaul George is much better at basketball than throwing away cups
Cups are are the up-and-up this Olympics–or as some would say, the cup-and-cup.Indiana PacersIvanka Trump's unpaid interns share cringeworthy financial advice
Ivanka Trump's interns have some questionable advice for students worried they can't afford an unpaiInstagram will tell you if they don't want to recommend your posts
Have your posts on Instagramgotten fewer engagements than you're used to? Are you convinced you're eAmazon launches in Australia, and it's about freaking time
It's finally happened.After a very soft launch on Nov. 23 had Australians wondering if they'd see AmAmazon Clinic launches ahead of reported mass layoffs
Amazon has launched Amazon Clinic, a virtual healthcare provider that will allow users to get onlineSnap's layoffs are just the latest in Big Tech's belt
Snap recently laid off about 20 percent of its employees and made the decision to cancel its originaIt's Barack Obama's birthday and Twitter users think he's their dad
Today is our dad's- I mean President Barack Obama's 55th birthday.Some of his childre- I mean citizeYouTube faces an existential threat as it moderates its worst videos
YouTube has spent years operating like many other tech platforms: Hear no evil, see no evil. That'sUber's $100M settlement over drivers as contractors may not be enough
UPDATE: Sept. 7, 2016, 4:41 p.m. EDT A ruling in a different case on Wednesday, Sept. 7 may have chaNegroni Sbagliato gets the respect it deserves with Google easter egg
Actor Emma D'Arcy's love for Negroni Sbagliato has taken the internet by storm, and now Google has gRaccoon stuck in a sewer grate is the face of adorable peril
Police in Northampton, Massachusetts, were able to save a trapped raccoon from a sewer grate WednesdPrince George's favourite film proves once and for all he just can't wait to be king
Hardened journalists have been trying for years to discover the much sought after title of Prince GeTwitter Blue subscription is no longer accessible
Never a boring minute in Twitterland. As if the saga with blue and grey checkmarks wasn't enough &mdOrganizations helping marginalized people stay (and thrive) in their tech jobs
The tech industry is facing turmoil at this time, with mass layoffs affecting thousands of employees