Instagram Plans to Use AI to Catch Teens Lying About Age

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(Bloomberg) -- Meta Platforms Inc., under fire from parents and lawmakers over its impact on teens’ mental health, plans to use artificial intelligence to identify young users on Instagram who are lying about their age and automatically switch them into more restrictive privacy settings.

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With a proprietary software tool it calls an “adult classifier,” Meta will categorize users into two age brackets — older or younger than 18 — based on the person’s own account data, according to Allison Hartnett, Meta’s director of product management for youth and social impact. The software can sift through a user’s profile, see their follower list and what content they interact with, and will even scan unsuspecting “happy birthday” posts made by friends to predict a user’s age.

Based on the software’s findings, people who are suspected to be under 18 will be automatically placed into teen accounts regardless of how old they claim to be on their profile, Hartnett said, sharing more details on the process for the first time. In September, Instagram introduced these new teen accounts, which come with more stringent default privacy settings, like limiting who a user can receive messages from and what types of content they can look at. The company didn’t disclose how accurate the adult classifier is.

The company is already moving teens into these more restrictive settings based on their self-reported birthday, but plans to utilize the adult classifier early next year to help catch people who may be trying to skirt the new rules. All users under 18 will be automatically herded into teen accounts, but those who are 16 or 17 will be allowed to change the more restrictive privacy settings on their own. Anyone younger than 16, however, needs parental consent to disable the more restrictive settings.

Properly protecting teenage users from harmful content has been a challenge for Meta for years. The company’s move toward teen accounts was applauded by outsiders who have long argued that Meta wasn’t doing enough to keep younger users safe online.

The social networking giant is facing a lawsuit from dozens of state attorneys general alleging the company knowingly hooked kids on social media and helped create a teen mental health crisis. It’s also been the target of parents who allege their teens have died from drugs or suicide due to content they’ve seen or conversations they’ve had using Meta’s products.