• Five Takeaways From The Times’s Investigation Into Child Influencers - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/22/us/takeaways-instagram-child-influencers.html

    JBy Jennifer Valentino-DeVries and Michael H. Keller

    Feb. 22, 2024

    Instagram does not allow children under 13 to have accounts, but parents are allowed to run them — and many do so for daughters who aspire to be social media influencers.

    What often starts as a parent’s effort to jump-start a child’s modeling career, or win favors from clothing brands, can quickly descend into a dark underworld dominated by adult men, many of whom openly admit on other platforms to being sexually attracted to children, an investigation by The New York Times found.
    Read the investigation here.
    A Marketplace of Girl Influencers Managed by Moms and Stalked by Men
    Feb. 22, 2024

    Thousands of so-called mom-run accounts examined by The Times offer disturbing insights into how social media is reshaping childhood, especially for girls, with direct parental encouragement and involvement.

    Nearly one in three preteens list influencing as a career goal, and 11 percent of those born in Generation Z, between 1997 and 2012, describe themselves as influencers. But health and technology experts have recently cautioned that social media presents a “profound risk of harm” for girls. Constant comparisons to their peers and face-altering filters are driving negative feelings of self-worth and promoting objectification of their bodies, researchers found.

    The pursuit of online fame, particularly through Instagram, has supercharged the often toxic phenomenon, The Times found, encouraging parents to commodify their daughter’s images. These are some key findings.
    Parents are the driving force behind the accounts. Some offer the sale of photos, exclusive chat sessions and even the girls’ worn leotards to mostly unknown male followers.

    The child influencers can earn six-figure incomes from monthly subscriptions and other interactions with followers, according to interviews. Some can demand $3,000 from companies for a single post. Big followings look impressive to brands and bolster chances of getting discounts, products and other financial incentives, and the accounts themselves are rewarded by Instagram’s algorithm with greater visibility on the platform.
    As the accounts gain followers, they also draw a higher proportion of males. Interacting with the men opens the door to abuse.

    One calculation performed by an audience demographics firm found 32 million connections to male followers among the 5,000 accounts examined by The Times. In addition, an analysis using image classification software from Google and Microsoft indicates that suggestive posts are more likely to receive “likes” and comments.

    Some of the male followers flatter, bully and blackmail girls and their parents to get racier images, and some have been convicted of sex crimes. The Times monitored separate exchanges on Telegram, the messaging app, where men openly fantasize about sexually abusing the children they follow on Instagram and extol the platform for making the images so readily available.
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    “It’s like a candy store 😍😍😍,” one of them wrote. “God bless instamoms 🙌,” wrote another.
    Account owners who report explicit images or potential predators to Instagram are typically met with silence or indifference.

    Meta, Instagram’s parent company, found that 500,000 child Instagram accounts had “inappropriate” interactions every day, according to an internal study in 2020 quoted in legal proceedings. The platform’s policy prohibits convicted sex offenders, and the company said it removed two accounts after The Times pointed them out.

    In a statement, Andy Stone, a Meta spokesman, said that parents were responsible for the accounts and their content and could delete them anytime. “Anyone on Instagram can control who is able to tag, mention or message them, as well as who can comment on their account,” he added, noting a feature that allows parents to ban comments that contain certain words.
    Some parents refuse to give in to creepy “bullies,” but others regret ever opening an account.

    A mother in Australia, whose daughter is now 17, said she worried that a childhood spent sporting bikinis online for adult men had scarred her. She warned mothers to avoid her mistakes. “I’ve been stupidly, naïvely, feeding a pack of monsters, and the regret is huge,” she said. But a mother in Alabama said parents couldn’t ignore the reality of this new economy. “Social media is the way of our future, and I feel like they’ll be behind if they don’t know what’s going on,” she said.
    Though rare, there have been criminal prosecutions against parents accused in child sexual abuse cases.

    Even the most unsettling images of sexualized child influencers tend to fall into a legal gray area. To meet the federal definition of so-called child pornography, the law generally requires a “lascivious exhibition” of the anal or genital area, though courts have found the requirement can be met without nudity or sheer clothing.

    #Média_sociaux #Instagram #Enfants #Pedopornographie #Exploitation_sexuelle

  • A new bill would ban making social media too addictive - MIT Technology Review
    https://www.technologyreview.com/f/614038/josh-hawley-social-media-addictive-design-legislation-smart-act-bi

    The news: One of Big Tech’s most vocal critics in the US Congress has introduced a bill to limit social-media companies’ ability to use design features like infinite scrolling, video autoplay, and achievement badges (like “power user”). Under Senator Josh Hawley’s Social Media Addiction Reduction Technology (SMART) Act, companies would instead have to build features that let users set limits on how long they’ve been glued to the screen.

    The bill directly references Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube but would apply to any platform where users interact with third-party content (with exceptions for, say, music playlists). It would give the Federal Trade Commission power to punish companies that didn’t comply. The FTC, along with the Department of Health and Human Services, would also have the power to write new rules to regulate similar, but not-yet-invented, design tactics.

    The background: In recent years, there has been growing concern that companies design products to keep users coming back—and that, once hooked, users are miserable. Study after study suggests that these platforms can lead to social isolation and depression (though other researchers say the real effects are not nearly so dire).

    All this has led to a lot of soul-searching. Ex-Googler Tristan Harris has argued that technology has caused a public health crisis and runs a nonprofit that hopes to undo the damage. Google itself now offers a suite of digital well-being tools to help users “find a balance with technology.” Apple’s ScreenTime lets people set daily limits.

    Why it matters: Hawley, a Republican, has made a name for himself by arguing that relying on the goodwill of these companies isn’t enough. He’s also the author of a bill that would give the government power to police Twitter for political bias, and has introduced legislation to protect children’s data privacy. Another bill of his, introduced in May, tackles the addictive features of video games. Whether these bills make progress will show how much momentum is building in Washington for the view that the government needs to step in to curb Big Tech.

    #Média_sociaux #Engagement #Législation

  • Calenda - Usages des médias sociaux et des pratiques
    professionnelles en relations publiques dans la gestion d’un événement

    http://calenda.org/263643

    À travers cette journée d’études franco-québécoise qui prendra la forme d’un webinaire diffusé en salle et en ligne par l’entremise d’un lien interactif web, nous souhaitons discuter de la façon dont les professionnels des relations publiques dans le cadre de la gestion d’un événement, cherchent à forger ou former les usages des publics potentiels ou avérés via la médiation. Le webinaire sera entièrement consacré au questionnement issu des pratiques professionnelles en relations publiques, notamment par les animateurs de communauté en ligne, en relation d’une part avec leurs nouvelles pratiques communicationnelles et, d’autre part, avec les usages effectifs et les aptitudes développés par leurs publics.

    #média_sociaux #réseaux_sociaux