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Instagram will alert parents about their teens’ suicide-related searches


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​Instagram said it would notify parents if their teenager repeatedly searches for terms related to suicide or self-harm within a short period, as pressure grows for governments ‌to follow Australia’s ban on the use of social media for people under 16.

Instagram, owned by Meta ​Platforms Inc., said on Thursday it would start alerting ⁠parents who are ⁠signed up to its ‌optional supervision setting if their children try to access suicide or self-harm content. The alerts will begin next week for those signed up in ​Canada, the United States, Britain and Australia.

“These alerts build on our existing work to help protect teens from potentially harmful content on ⁠Instagram,” the platform said in a statement. “We have strict policies against content that promotes or glorifies suicide or self-harm.”

Its existing policy is ‌to block such searches and redirect people to support resources, Instagram said.

Governments are increasingly seeking to protect children from ⁠harm online, particularly after worries over the AI chatbot Grok, which ⁠has generated non-consensual sexualized images.

Britain said in January it was considering restrictions to protect children online, after ​Australia’s move in December. Spain, Greece and ​Slovenia have in recent weeks said they are also looking at limiting access.

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In Britain, measures designed to ⁠stop ⁠access to pornography sites ​for children have had implications for adults’ privacy, and have led ​to tension with ⁠the U.S. over limits on free speech and regulatory reach.

Instagram’s “teen accounts” for under-16s need a parent’s permission to change settings, while parents can select an extra layer of monitoring with the agreement ⁠of their teenager. They also block teen users from seeing “sensitive content,” including those that are sexually suggestive or show violence.



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