Meta’s ‘bonfire’ of safety policies a danger to children, charity says

Meta’s ‘bonfire’ of safety policies a danger to children, charity says

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Meta’s ‘bonfire’ of safety policies a danger to children, charity says
Author: Martyn Landi
Published: Jan, 28 2025 00:01

Meta’s recent “bonfire of safety measures” risks taking Facebook and Instagram back to where they were when Molly Russell died, the charity set up in her name has warned. The Molly Rose Foundation said new online safety regulator Ofcom must strengthen incoming regulation in order to ensure teenagers are protected from harmful content online.

Image Credit: The Standard

The charity was set up by Molly’s family after her death in 2017, aged 14, when Molly chose to end her life after viewing harmful content on social media sites, including Meta-owned Instagram. Earlier this month, boss Mark Zuckerberg announced sweeping changes to Meta’s policies in the name of “free expression”, including plans to scale back content moderation that will see the firm ending the automated scanning of content for some types of posts, instead relying on user reports to remove certain sorts of content.

Campaigners called the move “chilling” and said they were “dismayed” by the decision, which has been attributed to Mr Zuckerberg’s desire to forge a positive relationship with new US President Donald Trump. Andy Burrows, chief executive of the Molly Rose Foundation, said: “Meta’s bonfire of safety measures is hugely concerning and Mark Zuckerberg’s increasingly cavalier choices are taking us back to what social media looked like at the time that Molly died.

“Ofcom must send a clear signal it is willing to act in the interests of children and urgently strengthen its requirements on tech platforms. “If Ofcom fails to keep pace with the irresponsible actions of tech companies the Prime Minister must intervene.

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