Dubai Telegraph - Tech CEOs face US Senate grilling over youth content

EUR -
AED 4.339628
AFN 76.80793
ALL 96.601284
AMD 446.973296
ANG 2.115258
AOA 1083.578502
ARS 1709.863127
AUD 1.684002
AWG 2.129934
AZN 2.004303
BAM 1.955818
BBD 2.378752
BDT 144.321307
BGN 1.984437
BHD 0.445555
BIF 3485.831573
BMD 1.181656
BND 1.502514
BOB 8.161108
BRL 6.20003
BSD 1.181026
BTN 106.883425
BWP 15.553207
BYN 3.372631
BYR 23160.451778
BZD 2.375291
CAD 1.614195
CDF 2599.642638
CHF 0.91673
CLF 0.025631
CLP 1012.028901
CNY 8.198567
CNH 8.199302
COP 4287.874049
CRC 585.485484
CUC 1.181656
CUP 31.313876
CVE 110.261333
CZK 24.378619
DJF 210.275425
DKK 7.467225
DOP 74.090985
DZD 153.302928
EGP 55.461268
ERN 17.724836
ETB 182.975832
FJD 2.601711
FKP 0.86251
GBP 0.863282
GEL 3.184588
GGP 0.86251
GHS 12.968172
GIP 0.86251
GMD 86.261042
GNF 10364.655314
GTQ 9.058775
GYD 247.093284
HKD 9.231195
HNL 31.203415
HRK 7.535062
HTG 154.802057
HUF 380.110877
IDR 19834.977216
ILS 3.658365
IMP 0.86251
INR 106.859484
IQD 1547.220561
IRR 49777.246674
ISK 144.811545
JEP 0.86251
JMD 185.201677
JOD 0.837826
JPY 184.886643
KES 152.374794
KGS 103.336031
KHR 4767.063349
KMF 493.932232
KPW 1063.425303
KRW 1721.400502
KWD 0.363017
KYD 0.984213
KZT 586.713528
LAK 25404.337597
LBP 105763.305484
LKR 365.530937
LRD 219.67199
LSL 18.874832
LTL 3.489122
LVL 0.714772
LYD 7.463752
MAD 10.827132
MDL 19.983266
MGA 5232.069529
MKD 61.679405
MMK 2481.401498
MNT 4218.32969
MOP 9.504226
MRU 46.896837
MUR 54.214692
MVR 18.256503
MWK 2047.563324
MXN 20.392949
MYR 4.646264
MZN 75.330365
NAD 18.875551
NGN 1616.155302
NIO 43.460761
NOK 11.422942
NPR 171.044273
NZD 1.962701
OMR 0.45438
PAB 1.181016
PEN 3.970236
PGK 5.059875
PHP 69.685768
PKR 330.32801
PLN 4.216803
PYG 7816.806196
QAR 4.307693
RON 5.094469
RSD 117.419987
RUB 89.95126
RWF 1723.722906
SAR 4.43139
SBD 9.521902
SCR 16.205764
SDG 710.745918
SEK 10.596161
SGD 1.502836
SHP 0.886548
SLE 28.92105
SLL 24778.728397
SOS 673.808954
SRD 44.777663
STD 24457.887298
STN 24.500533
SVC 10.333656
SYP 13068.609747
SZL 18.874251
THB 37.435444
TJS 11.036947
TMT 4.147612
TND 3.415815
TOP 2.845143
TRY 51.414785
TTD 8.000276
TWD 37.330894
TZS 3049.013957
UAH 50.948755
UGX 4205.038088
USD 1.181656
UYU 45.518486
UZS 14477.641053
VES 439.151193
VND 30701.778474
VUV 141.274961
WST 3.221394
XAF 655.965717
XAG 0.013102
XAU 0.000236
XCD 3.193483
XCG 2.128528
XDR 0.814728
XOF 655.979596
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.677234
ZAR 18.897771
ZMK 10636.324377
ZMW 23.119307
ZWL 380.492654
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.53

    -0.55%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    3.9650

    88.895

    +4.46%

  • NGG

    1.3000

    87.53

    +1.49%

  • JRI

    0.0470

    13.167

    +0.36%

  • AZN

    3.8700

    188.19

    +2.06%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    23.86

    -0.34%

  • GSK

    3.5050

    56.845

    +6.17%

  • RIO

    -0.8550

    95.515

    -0.9%

  • BCE

    0.2700

    26.37

    +1.02%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2000

    16.8

    -1.19%

  • BTI

    -0.3600

    61.51

    -0.59%

  • RELX

    -0.5400

    29.97

    -1.8%

  • BP

    0.2450

    39.065

    +0.63%

  • VOD

    0.3400

    15.59

    +2.18%

Tech CEOs face US Senate grilling over youth content
Tech CEOs face US Senate grilling over youth content / Photo: Stefani Reynolds - AFP

Tech CEOs face US Senate grilling over youth content

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and the chief executives of X, TikTok, Discord and Snap face a grilling by US lawmakers on Wednesday over the dangers that social media platforms bring to children and teens.

Text size:

The tech chieftains have been convened by the US Senate Judiciary Committee where they will be asked about the effects of social media in a session titled "Big Tech and the Online Child Sexual Exploitation Crisis."

The hearing could be grueling for executives confronting political anger for not doing enough to thwart online dangers for children, including from sexual predators.

"There are no tools to hold the company accountable. Instead, survivors and advocates are left to plead with these companies to choose safety over profit," said US Senator Dick Durbin who heads the judiciary committee.

Testifying to senators will be Zuckerberg, X's Linda Yaccarino, Shou Zi Chew of TikTok, Evan Spiegel of Snap and Discord's Jason Citron.

"I'm proud of the work our teams have done to improve online child safety, not just on our services but across the entire internet," Meta's Zuckerberg will tell the committee, according to his prepared testimony seen by AFP.

Ahead of their testimony, Meta and X, formerly Twitter, announced new measures seeking to satisfy any political pushback.

Meta, which owns the world's leading platforms Facebook and Instagram, said it would block direct messages sent to young teens by strangers.

By default, teens under age 16 can now only be messaged or added to group chats by people they already follow or are connected to.

Meta also tightened content restrictions for teens on Instagram and Facebook making it harder for them to view posts that discuss suicide, self-harm or eating disorders.

- Multi-state lawsuit -

Zuckerberg will tell lawmakers that around 40,000 Meta employees work on online safety and that $20 billion has been invested since 2016 to keep the platform safer.

He will also back legislation that delivers age verification and clear parental control.

But senators will point to internal company documents that show that Zuckerberg declined to strengthen the teams devoted to tracking online dangers to teens.

"The hypocrisy is mind-boggling," US Senator Richard Blumenthal told the New York Times.

Those documents are part of a major lawsuit brought by about 40 states jointly suing Meta over alleged failures with kids.

Those lawsuits contend Meta knowingly allows users younger than 13 on its Instagram platform, only disabling a fraction of those accounts.

The suits also accuse Meta of concealing internal studies showing user harm on Instagram and Facebook.

Under US law, web platforms are largely shielded from legal liability in relation to content that is shared on their site.

While lawmakers would like to set up more rules to increase online safety, new laws have been stymied by a politically divided Washington and intense lobbying by big tech.

One existing proposal is the Kids Online Safety Act, or KOSA, which aims to protect children from algorithms that might trigger anxiety or depression.

Another idea would require social media platforms to verify the age of account holders and completely bar children under the age of 13.

X also announced last week, ahead of the hearing, that it was setting up a team in Texas to weed out child sexual exploitation content and other violations of the platform's rules.

When Elon Musk first took over Twitter in 2022, he imposed huge staff cuts that saw the company's trust and safety teams decimated.

Musk, a self-declared "free speech absolutist," also vowed to remove content restrictions, with numerous banned figures able to return.

H.El-Din--DT