Starting
today,
Instagram
will
begin
putting
new
and
existing
users
under
the
age
of
18
into
“Teen
Accounts”
—
a
move
that
will
affect
how
tens
of
millions
of
teens
interact
with
the
platform.
The
new
account
type
automatically
applies
a
set
of
protections
to
young
users,
and
only
users
16
years
of
age
and
older
can
loosen
some
of
these
settings.
For
starters,
the
accounts
of
all
minors
on
Instagram
will
be
private
by
default
(not
just
teens
under
16)
and
will
come
with
some
of
Instagram’s
existing
restrictions
for
young
users,
such
as
those
that
prevent
strangers
from
direct
messaging
them.
But
other
new
features
are
coming,
too,
including
a
Sleep
Mode
that
silences
notifications
from
10PM
to
7AM.
“This
really
standardizes
a
lot
of
the
work
that
we’ve
done,
simplifies
it,
and
brings
it
to
all
teens,”
Antigone
Davis,
Meta’s
global
head
of
safety,
said
during
an
interview
with
The
Verge.
“It
provides
essentially
a
set
of
protections
that
are
in
place
and
are
already
populated.”
Teens
will
also
get
to
pick
age-appropriate
topics
they
can
see
more
of
in
Instagram’s
recommendations
and
on
the
Explore
page,
such
as
“sports,”
“animal
&
pets,”
“travel,”
and
more.
Instagram
will
continue
limiting
the
types
of
content
teens
see
on
Reels
or
on
the
Explore
page.
It
will
also
send
alerts
reminding
teens
to
take
breaks
from
the
app.
Parents
can
now
decide
when
Sleep
Mode
is
enabled
and
see
who
their
teen
has
messaged
in
the
past
week.Image:
Instagram
Along
with
these
changes,
Instagram
is
updating
some
of
its
parental
controls.
Parents
who
want
to
supervise
their
teen
on
the
app
will
be
able
to
see
who
their
child
has
messaged
in
the
past
seven
days
(without
seeing
the
contents
of
the
messages).
They’ll
also
get
to
see
which
topics
their
teen
has
chosen
to
view
most
often.
While
Instagram
will
let
teens
over
the
age
of
16
tweak
these
settings,
younger
teens
will
need
the
permission
of
a
parent
to
make
any
changes,
like
making
their
account
public.
Parents
will
then
have
to
set
up
Instagram’s
supervisory
tools
to
approve
the
change.
Instagram’s
teen
accounts
are
rolling
out
gradually
to
users
in
the
US,
the
UK,
Australia,
and
Canada.
Teens
who
sign
up
for
new
accounts
will
see
the
change
first,
followed
by
existing
users
within
about
a
week.
Meta
plans
on
bringing
Teen
Accounts
to
the
European
Union
later
this
year
and
will
expand
the
feature
across
its
other
platforms
in
2025.
“We
know
some
teens
are
going
to
try
to
lie
about
their
age
to
get
around
these
protections”
But
even
with
these
protections
coming
to
all
teens
on
Instagram,
questions
remain
about
how
well
Meta
can
apply
them.
“We
know
some
teens
are
going
to
try
to
lie
about
their
age
to
get
around
these
protections,”
Davis
says.
“Which
is
why
we
are
going
to
be
building
up
new
opportunities
to
verify
a
teen’s
age.”
Users
who
attempt
to
change
their
age
from
under
18
to
over
18
are
already
required
to
record
a
video
selfie,
upload
their
ID,
or
have
other
users
vouch
for
their
age,
but
Instagram’s
new
systems
take
things
a
step
further.
The
platform
can
now
use
AI
to
scan
for
signals
that
may
indicate
a
user
is
under
18.
For
example,
if
a
user
says
they’re
18
when
creating
an
account
but
someone
on
the
app
tells
them
“Happy
14th
birthday,”
Instagram
can
use
that
to
inform
their
real
age.
“One
of
the
challenges
for
age
broadly
is
it
can
be
very
hard
to
know,”
Davis
says.
“We
have
to
take
a
multi-layered
approach
because
there’s
no
one
foolproof
way
to
do
this.”
Since
Facebook
whistleblower
Frances
Haugen
leaked
a
trove
of
internal
documents
detailing
the
company’s
studies
on
the
mental
health
of
teens
in
2021,
lawmakers
have
taken
a
harder
stance
on
social
platforms
and
their
effect
on
kids.
Instagram
has
rolled
out
a
slew
of
child
safety
features
over
the
past
few
years
and
launched
parental
controls
in
2022
in
response.
The
platform
has
even
agreed
to
help
researchers
study
its
impact
on
the
mental
health
of
teens
and
young
adults.
All
of
this
still
hasn’t
put
lawmakers
at
ease.
Nearly
40
US
states
are
backing
the
surgeon
general’s
proposal
to
put
warning
labels
on
social
media
platforms,
while
the
Senate
passed
landmark
online
child
safety
legislation
in
July.
(Originally posted by Emma Roth)
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