The European Union EU probes Facebook, Instagram over children addiction concerns as well has possible ban of TikTok usage if requirement isn’t made by 3months.

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By Umar Fiddausi Adenike

The European Union Commission has launched investigations into the operations of two Meta platforms, Facebook and Instagram, citing concerns about the safety of children using the platforms.
The commission, in a statement released on Thursday, said it was concerned that the systems of both Facebook and Instagram, including their algorithms, may stimulate behavioural addictions in children, as well as create so-called ‘rabbit-hole effects’.In addition, the commission said it was also concerned about age assurance and verification methods put in place by Meta. The platforms are being investigated under the EU’s Digital Service Act, which all social media platforms operating within the bloc are expected to comply with.The commission said the launch of the formal investigation,its preliminary analysis of the risk assessment report sent by Meta in September 2023.Meta’s replies to the commission’s formal requests for information on the protection of minors.Facebook and Instagram were designated as a Large Online Platforms which on 25 April 2023 under the EU’s Digital Services Act, as they both have more than 45 million monthly active users in the EU.
The online platforms was four months from their designation, that is, at the end of August 2023, Facebook and Instagram started to comply with a series of obligations set out in the DSA. Since 17 February, the Digital Services Act applies to all online intermediaries in the EU.On 30 April 2024, the commission opened formal proceedings against Meta, in relation to both Facebook and Instagram, on deceptive advertising, political content, notice and action, and data access for researchers, as well as on the non-availability of an effective third-party real-time civic discourse and election-monitoring tool ahead of the European Parliament elections.
Earlier in February this year, the commission had also opened formal proceedings to assess whether TikTok might have breached DSA in areas linked to the protection of minors, among others.The Bytedance-owned company is also being investigated on issues concerning advertising transparency, data access for researchers, as well as the risk management of addictive design and harmful. The LLC is controlled by TikTok Ltd, which is registered in the Cayman Islands and based in Shanghai. That firm is ultimately owned by ByteDance Ltd, also incorporated in the Cayman Islands and based in Beijing.TikTok on Tuesday sued the U.S. government over a law that would force Chinese parent ByteDance to sell the app or face a national ban. President Biden signed legislation in April that gives ByteDance nine months to find a buyer for the popular short-form video app, and a three month extension if a deal is in progress.

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