TechCrunch News 04月25日 03:36
Parents who lost children to online harms protest outside of Meta’s NYC office
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

Meta公司近期面临来自因网络伤害失去孩子的家庭的巨大压力。45个家庭在Meta曼哈顿办公室外举行守夜活动,纪念逝去的孩子,并要求Meta采取行动并承担责任。这些家庭指责Meta未能有效防止网络欺凌、性勒索和毒品交易等问题,并对其置之不理。尽管Meta已采取一些安全措施,如青少年账户和AI年龄验证,但家长们认为这些措施远远不够,无法弥补安全漏洞。他们呼吁Meta停止向儿童推广危险内容,防止不良行为者利用平台接触儿童,并提供透明快速的问题报告解决方案。

💔 Meta公司因未能有效保护儿童免受网络伤害而面临严峻挑战,众多家长在Meta办公室外举行守夜活动,表达对该公司的不满与诉求。

💊 家长们指控Meta旗下的社交平台存在安全漏洞,导致儿童遭受包括性勒索、网络欺凌甚至因在Snapchat上购买毒品而导致死亡等严重伤害,并对Meta提起诉讼。

📢 倡导团体向Meta CEO扎克伯格递交了一封公开信,呼吁Meta停止向儿童推广危险内容,防止性侵者等不良分子利用Meta平台,并对儿童的问题报告提供快速透明的解决方案。

🛡️ Meta公司声称已采取措施保护青少年用户,如推出青少年账户,限制联系人和内容类型,并使用AI识别虚报年龄的用户,但这些措施被认为不足以解决根本问题。

⚖️ Meta公司还反对《儿童在线安全法案》,该法案旨在对社交媒体施加规则,以防止成瘾和精神健康危害,这进一步加剧了家长和倡导团体对Meta的不信任。

Meta may have managed to kill a bipartisan bill to protect children online, but parents of children who have suffered from online harm are still putting pressure on social media companies to step up.

On Thursday, 45 families who lost children to online harms – from sextortion to cyberbullying – held a vigil outside of one of Meta’s Manhattan offices to honor the memory of their kids and demand action and accountability from the company. 

Many dressed in white, holding roses, signs that read “Meta profits, kids pay the price,” and framed photos of their dead children – a scene that starkly contrasted with the otherwise sunny spring day in New York City. 

While each family’s story is different, the thread that holds them together is that “they’ve all been ignored by the tech companies when they tried to reach out to them and alert them to what happened to their kid,” Sarah Gardner, CEO of child safety advocacy Heat Initiative, one of the organizers of the event told TechCrunch. 

One mother, Perla Mendoza, said her son died of fentanyl poisoning after taking drugs that he purchased off a dealer on Snapchat. She is one of many parents with similar stories who have filed suit against Snap, alleging the company did little to prevent illegal drug sales on the platform before or after her son’s death. She found her son’s dealer posting images advertising hundreds of pills and reported it to Snap, but she says it took the company eight months to flag his account. 

“His drug dealer was selling on Facebook, too,” Mendoza told TechCrunch. “It’s all connected. He was doing the same thing on all those apps, [including] Instagram. He had multiple accounts.”  

The vigil follows recent testimony from whistleblower Sarah Wynn-Williams reveals how Meta targeted 13- to 17-year-olds with ads when they were feeling down or depressed. It also comes four years after The Wall Street Journal published The Facebook Files, which show the company knew that Instagram was toxic for teen girls’ mental health despite downplaying the issue in public.  

Parents of children lost to online harms left an open letter to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg outside Meta’s office in NYC, April 24, 2025. Image Credits:Rebecca Bellan

Thursday’s event organizers, which also included advocacy groups ParentsTogether Action and Design it For Us, delivered an open letter addressed to Zuckerberg with more than 10,000 signatures. The letter demands that Meta stop promoting dangerous content to kids (including sexualizing content, racism, hate speech, content promoting disordered eating, and more); prevent sexual predators and other bad actors from using Meta platforms to reach kids; provide transparent, fast resolutions to kids’ reports of problematic content or interactions. 

Gardner placed the letter on a pile of rose bouquets that were placed outside Meta’s office on Wanamaker Place as protesters chanted, “Build a future where children are respected.”

Over the past year, Meta has implemented new safeguards for children and teens across Facebook and Instagram, including working with law enforcement and other tech platforms to prevent child exploitation. Meta recently introduced Teen Accounts to Instagram, Facebook, and Messenger, which limits who can contact a teen on the app and restricts the type of content the account holder can view. More recently, Instagram began using AI to find teens lying about their age to bypass safeguards. 

“We know parents are concerned about their teens’ having unsafe or inappropriate experiences online,” Sophie Vogel, a Meta spokesperson, told TechCrunch. “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.”

Gardner says Meta’s actions don’t do enough to plug the gaps in safety.

For example, Gardner said, despite Meta’s stricter private messaging policies for teens, adults can still approach kids who are not in their network through post comments and ask them to approve their friend request. 

“We’ve had researchers go on and sign on as a 12- or 13-year-old, and within a few minutes, they’re getting really extremist, violent, or sexualized content,” Gardner said. “So it’s clearly not working, and it’s not nearly enough.”

Gardner also noted that Meta’s recent changes to its fact-checking and content moderation policy in favor of community notes are a signal that the company is “letting go of more responsibility, not leaning in.”

Meta and its army of lobbyists also led the opposition to the Kids Online Safety Act, which failed to make it through Congress at the end of 2024. The bill had been widely expected to pass in the House of Representatives after sailing through a Senate vote, and would have imposed rules on social media to prevent the addiction and mental health harms the sites are widely agreed to cause.

“I think what [Mark Zuckerberg] needs to see, and what the point of today is, is to show that parents are really upset about this, and not just the ones who’ve lost their own kids, but other Americans who are waking up to this reality and thinking that, ‘I don’t want Mark Zuckerberg making decisions about my child’s online safety,’” Gardner said. 

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

Meta 儿童安全 网络欺凌 社交媒体责任
相关文章