Mark Zuckerberg testifies in Instagram addiction trial

Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta, defended his company's social media platforms during testimony in a Los Angeles court this week. The trial stems from a 2023 lawsuit alleging Instagram addiction caused harm to a young user. Zuckerberg pushed back on claims of intentional addictiveness while discussing child safety measures.

In a Los Angeles County court, Mark Zuckerberg testified this week in a lawsuit accusing Meta's Instagram of fostering addiction. The plaintiff, a Californian who filed the case in 2023, claims she became addicted from an early age and suffered harmful effects. This suit is among several high-profile cases that could impact platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and Snap.

Zuckerberg stated that Instagram is not inherently addictive but provides a valuable service, so "people will want to use it more." He addressed concerns about the platform's effects on children, noting that as early as 2018, he reached out to Apple CEO Tim Cook to discuss "the well-being of kids and teens." Meta has implemented age restrictions and guidelines, though Zuckerberg acknowledged the company cannot always prevent younger users from accessing services. In 2024, Instagram launched teen accounts featuring DM protections and PG-13-style content restrictions.

When asked if Meta should help young users, Zuckerberg replied, "I think a reasonable company should try to help a person that uses its services." He pushed back on characterizations of his public statements and described social networks as useful for connecting people. The testimony also touched on Zuckerberg's public persona, with him admitting, "I'm actually well known to be sort of bad at this," regarding perceptions of his demeanor as "robotic."

Experts like Natalie Bazarova, a Cornell University professor and head of its Social Media Lab, highlighted the trial's core issue: whether companies designed products to exploit biases for compulsive use. "The core question is whether companies intentionally designed these products to harm young people by exploiting natural biases toward instant gratification," she said. Broader concerns include exposure to sexual and violent content, predator contacts, mental health risks from bullying, and screen time effects.

Tech firms like Roblox, Discord, and YouTube have added age-estimation tools amid scrutiny. Countries such as Australia have banned social media for children, while Spain imposes stricter age limits than the US. The trial's outcome could influence ongoing litigation and regulations on social media's impact on youth.

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Realistic illustration depicting EU regulators finding TikTok in breach of Digital Services Act over addictive features like infinite scroll, with fines looming.
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EU finds TikTok in breach over addictive design features

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The European Commission has issued preliminary findings declaring TikTok's addictive design elements a violation of the Digital Services Act, potentially leading to fines up to 6% of its global turnover. The regulator highlighted features like infinite scroll and personalized recommendations that could harm users' wellbeing, especially minors. TikTok plans to challenge the accusations vigorously.

인스타그램 수장 아담 모세리가 청소년 정신건강 주장 재판에서 플랫폼을 변호했다. 부모들은 소셜미디어의 아동 영향에 대한 우려를 표명했다. 재판은 인스타그램의 청소년 정신건강 결정에 초점을 맞췄다.

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As Australia's groundbreaking ban on social media for minors under 16 takes effect—sparking Reddit's High Court challenge—experts debate its mental health benefits versus risks of driving use underground. The law targets platforms like TikTok and Instagram to curb harmful content exposure.

호주와 스페인 등 국가들이 아동 대상 소셜미디어 금지를 추진하는 가운데, 필리핀도 청소년을 온라인 위험으로부터 보호하기 위해 유사한 제한을 고려 중이나 아직 결정은 나지 않았다.

AI에 의해 보고됨

EU 위원회의 예비 조사에서 TikTok이 무한 스크롤을 포함한 중독성 디자인으로 인해 디지털 서비스법을 위반한 것으로 나타났다. 이 판결은 플랫폼이 미성년자와 취약 성인 등 사용자에게 해를 줄이는 변화를 시행할 것을 촉구한다.

In a detailed High Court filing, Reddit argues Australia's under-16 social media ban infringes constitutional rights to free political discourse and misclassifies the platform, following its initial compliance and subsequent challenge announcement. The government likens the suit to Big Tobacco resistance, as Reddit leverages its resources in its fourth-largest market.

AI에 의해 보고됨

A study published in Psychological Bulletin warns that excessive consumption of short videos on platforms like TikTok and Instagram impacts users' attention, mental health, and cognitive capacity, particularly among young people and adults. The research highlights how this format promotes superficial information processing, leading to mental fatigue and potential addictions. While the analysis has limitations, it calls for greater oversight in digital consumption.

 

 

 

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