Under 16 kids will no longer be allowed to livestream on Insta without parental consent
The social media company said it was extending safeguards for users under 18 to Facebook and Messenger.
PTI
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London, 8 April
Instagram users under
16 will not be able to livestream or unblur nudity in direct messages they've
received without parental approval, owner Meta Platforms said Tuesday as it
widened its safety measures for teenagers.
The social media company also said it was extending
safeguards for users under 18 to Facebook and Messenger.
Meta launched its teen account program for Instagram in
September to give parents more options to supervise their children's online activity
amid a growing backlash against how social media affects the lives of young
people.
The latest changes will roll out first to users in the
United States, Britain, Canada and Australia, before going out to global users
in the following months.
Under the changes, teens under 16 are blocked from using
Instagram Live unless parents give permission. They also need permission to
“turn off our feature that blurs images containing suspected nudity” in direct
messages, Meta said in a blog post.
These will include protections already in place for teen
Instagram users, including setting teen accounts to private by default,
blocking private messages from strangers, strict limits on sensitive content
like fight videos, reminders to get off the app after 60 minutes and
notifications that are halted during bedtime hours.
“Teen Accounts on Facebook and Messenger will offer similar,
automatic protections to limit inappropriate content and unwanted contact, as
well as ways to ensure teens' time is well spent,” Meta said.
The company said at least 54 million teen accounts have been
set up since the program launched in September.
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