A study by the company itself, 32% of adolescents
The director of Instagram, Adam Mosseri, will have to testify next month before a subcommittee of the United States Senate about the negative impact of the application on the mental and physical health of young users, especially teenagers, according to the newspaper. 'New York Times'.
The Democratic senator from Connecticut and chairman of the Senate consumer protection subcommittee, Richard Blumenthal, had called for the appearance of the CEO of Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, or failing that, the person in charge of Instagram.
"We want to hear directly from the leader of the
company why he uses powerful algorithms that bring poisonous content to
children and lead them through burrows to dark places," said the
politician after the leak of thousands of confidential documents by the former
Facebook worker Frances Haugen.
According to a study by the company itself, 32% of
adolescents who already felt bad about their body feel worse after using the
'app'
The director of Instagram, Adam Mosseri, will have to
testify next month before a subcommittee of the United States Senate about the
negative impact of the application on the mental and physical health of young
users, especially teenagers, according to the newspaper. 'New York Times'.
The Democratic senator from Connecticut and chairman of the
Senate consumer protection subcommittee, Richard Blumenthal, had called for the
appearance of the CEO of Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, or failing that, the person in
charge of Instagram.
"We want to hear directly from the leader of the
company why he uses powerful algorithms that bring poisonous content to
children and lead them through burrows to dark places," said the
politician after the leak of thousands of confidential documents by the former
Facebook worker Frances Haugen.
According to a study by the company itself, 32% of adolescents who already felt bad about their body feel worse after using the 'app' director of Instagram, Adam Mosseri, will have to testify next month before a subcommittee of the United States Senate about the negative impact of the application on the mental and physical health of young users, especially teenagers, according to the newspaper. 'New York Times'.
The Democratic senator from Connecticut and chairman of the
Senate consumer protection subcommittee, Richard Blumenthal, had called for the
appearance of the CEO of Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, or failing that, the person in
charge of Instagram.
"We want to hear directly from the leader of the company why he uses powerful algorithms that bring poisonous content to children and lead them through burrows to dark places," said the politician after the leak of thousands of confidential documents by the former Facebook worker Frances Haugen.