Meta allowed sex-trafficking posts on Instagram as it prioritized profit over kids' safety.
A court filing claims that Meta had a "17x" policy allowing sex traffickers to post content related to sexual solicitation or prostitution 16 times before their accounts were suspended on the 17th strike. This allegation is one of many in a lawsuit claiming that Meta chose profit and user engagement over the safety and well-being of children.
The filing accuses Meta of targeting children and schools, misrepresenting its social media products, and addicting them to products they knew were harming them. The company's leader, Mark Zuckerberg, is one of the richest people in the world, but Meta allegedly refused to invest resources in keeping kids safe.
Meta had no way for users to report child sexual abuse material on Instagram until 2020, despite having artificial intelligence tools that identified it with 100% confidence. The company did not automatically delete such content and instead declined to tighten enforcement due to fears of "false positives."
The filing also claims that Meta dragged its feet in making kids' accounts private by default to protect them from adult predators, allowing billions of unwanted adult-minor interactions to happen. It alleges that the company's approach to children's mental health has contributed to a compromised educational environment and forced school districts to spend money and resources addressing student distraction and mental health problems.
In internal communications, Meta researchers described Instagram as "pushers" that hooked teens despite how it made them feel. The filing also claims that Zuckerberg lied to Congress about his teams' goals to increase time users spent on Meta's platforms.
The plaintiffs seek unspecified damages and a court order requiring the companies to stop alleged "harmful conduct" and warn minor users and parents that their products are addictive and dangerous.
A court filing claims that Meta had a "17x" policy allowing sex traffickers to post content related to sexual solicitation or prostitution 16 times before their accounts were suspended on the 17th strike. This allegation is one of many in a lawsuit claiming that Meta chose profit and user engagement over the safety and well-being of children.
The filing accuses Meta of targeting children and schools, misrepresenting its social media products, and addicting them to products they knew were harming them. The company's leader, Mark Zuckerberg, is one of the richest people in the world, but Meta allegedly refused to invest resources in keeping kids safe.
Meta had no way for users to report child sexual abuse material on Instagram until 2020, despite having artificial intelligence tools that identified it with 100% confidence. The company did not automatically delete such content and instead declined to tighten enforcement due to fears of "false positives."
The filing also claims that Meta dragged its feet in making kids' accounts private by default to protect them from adult predators, allowing billions of unwanted adult-minor interactions to happen. It alleges that the company's approach to children's mental health has contributed to a compromised educational environment and forced school districts to spend money and resources addressing student distraction and mental health problems.
In internal communications, Meta researchers described Instagram as "pushers" that hooked teens despite how it made them feel. The filing also claims that Zuckerberg lied to Congress about his teams' goals to increase time users spent on Meta's platforms.
The plaintiffs seek unspecified damages and a court order requiring the companies to stop alleged "harmful conduct" and warn minor users and parents that their products are addictive and dangerous.