By Shubhangi Mathur 5 pm ET
•Facebook will prompt users to 'take a break' from Instagram after prolonged use
•Social media giant ask lawmakers to step in as pressure mounts
Facebook will introduce new measures to restrict harmful content and give more control to parents on teen Instagram accounts, said the company’s vice president of global affairs, Nick Clegg.
Clegg told ABC that the one of measures wll include nudging teens who are looking at content harmful to their well-being to look at something else.
Facebook will also urge users to “take a break” from Instagram who are on the platform for long period of time.
“We have no commercial incentive to do anything other than try and make sure that the experience is positive,” Clegg said.
“We can’t change human nature. We always see bad things online. We can do everything we can to try to reduce and mitigate them.”
Clegg added that Instagram Kids, created for children aged 13 and below, is a part of the solution. The company had to pause work on the kids version of Instagram app amid mounting pressure from lawmakers.
The Whistleblower Leak
Clegg has made the statements as the whistleblower Frances Haugen alleges that the tech giant puts its own profits over users’ health and safety.
The company’s documents leaked by Haugen were the source of the Wall Street Journal’s report which said that Facebook has taken no steps despite knowing Instagram’s negative impact on teenagers, especially girls.
Political pressure
As political pressure mounts on the company, Clegg urged lawmakers to step in.
“We’re not saying this is somehow a substitution of our own responsibilities, but there are a whole bunch of things that only regulators and lawmakers can do,” he told NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
“And at the end of the day, I don’t think anyone wants a private company to adjudicate on these really difficult trade-offs between free expression on one hand and moderating or removing content on the other,” he added.
Facebook’s Oversight Board announced on Monday that Haugen is scheduled to speak with the board in the coming weeks.
Picture Credit: Reuters