Families demand action from Meta over children’s deaths linked to platform harm

“Meta profits, kids pay the price,” was the message delivered by dozens of grieving families at the doors of Meta’s Manhattan office on Thursday.

Forty-five families traveled from across the U.S. and as far as the United Kingdom to hold a vigil outside the East Village headquarters of Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram. Holding photos of their children, they spoke about lives lost to cyberbullying, sextortion scams, and suicide-glorifying content—calling on Meta to take immediate action to protect children on its platforms.

On a pile of rose bouquets, the families and demonstrators placed an open letter addressed to Mark Zuckerberg. Signed by more than 11,000 individuals and 18 safety organizations, the letter urges Meta to “end the algorithmic promotion of dangerous content to children under 18, including explicit and sexualizing content, racism and hate speech, content promoting disordered eating or self-harm, dangerous viral challenges, and content promoting drugs and alcohol.”

The letter also calls for concrete steps to “prevent nefarious actors including sexual predators, sextortionists, and drug dealers from finding, meeting, and grooming children and teens across all Meta platforms,” along with faster, more transparent responses to reports of harmful content or behavior.

The vigil was organized by Heat Initiative, ParentsTogether Action, and Design It for Us. Among those in attendance was Tammy Rodriguez, a mother from Connecticut, whose 11-year-old daughter died by suicide after becoming addicted to Instagram and later being groomed by men on another platform. In an effort to understand her daughter’s experience, Rodriguez created a fake Instagram account as a 12-year-old. “Within weeks the whole algorithm changed, I would never have received that on my own, just suicide content, self-harm content,” Rodriguez said, per ABC 7.

Mary Rodee, another mother who lost her 15-year-old son in 2021, shared that he was coerced into sending intimate photos by a sextortion scammer on Facebook. “My kid is dead. I have nothing else to lose,” Rodee said at the vigil, according to Bloomberg. “Like so many other families, I’ve been trying to meet with Mark Zuckerberg for years on this issue, but he refuses. We’re all here to show that we’re willing to do whatever it takes.”

“We know parents are concerned about their teens’ having unsafe or inappropriate experiences online,” a Meta spokesperson told Fast Company. “It’s why we significantly changed the Instagram experience for teens with Teen Accounts, which were designed to address parents’ top concerns. Teen Accounts have built-in protections that limit who can contact teens and the content they see, and 94% of parents say these are helpful. We’ve also developed safety features to help prevent abuse, like warning teens when they’re chatting to someone in another country, and recently worked with Childhelp to launch a first-of-its kind online safety curriculum, helping middle schoolers recognize potential online harm and know where to go for help.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/91323710/families-demand-action-from-meta-over-childrens-deaths-linked-to-platform-harm?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Vytvořeno 2mo | 25. 4. 2025 20:10:07


Chcete-li přidat komentář, přihlaste se

Ostatní příspěvky v této skupině

How Cisco has been quietly retooling for the AI revolution

Welcome to AI DecodedFast Company’s weekly newsletter that breaks down the most important news in the world of AI. You can sign up to receive this newsletter every week 

19. 6. 2025 16:50:03 | Fast company - tech
Texas Instruments’ $60 billion chip pledge sounds bold—but the U.S. still has work to do

More than $60 billion of investment will be spent by Texas Instruments to build and expand seven semiconductor factories in the United States, creating more than 60,000 jobs in the country, the co

19. 6. 2025 12:20:04 | Fast company - tech
How influencer marketing lost its edge

Scroll through a TikTok feed, and you’ll eventually come across someone—usually incredibly photogenic, with perfect teeth and flawless skin—extolling the virtues of some product or another,

19. 6. 2025 12:20:03 | Fast company - tech
Will AI replace humans at work? 4 ways it already has the edge

If you’ve worried that AI might take your job, deprive you of your livelihood, or maybe even replace your

19. 6. 2025 9:50:05 | Fast company - tech
AI users have to choose between accuracy or sustainability

Cheap or free access to AI models keeps improving, with Google the latest firm to make its newest models availabl

19. 6. 2025 5:20:04 | Fast company - tech
Kids are turning Roblox into a virtual protest ground against ICE

As anti-ICE protests intensify across the country, kids are turning Roblox into a protest ground online.

Last week,

18. 6. 2025 20:10:03 | Fast company - tech