November 14, 2024

Tech CEOs Grilled by Senate on Child Safety: A Somber Hearing Room and a Call for New Regulations

4 min read

The Senate Judiciary Committee held a high-stakes hearing on child exploitation online on January 31, 2024. The hearing room was filled with parents of children who had been victims of online exploitation on social media. The CEOs of Meta, Snap, Discord, X, and TikTok were called to testify about their records on child safety.

Mark Zuckerberg, Evan Spiegel, Jason Citron, Linda Yaccarino, and Shou Chew spent nearly four hours being grilled by lawmakers about their companies’ efforts to keep young users safe. Notably, Citron and Yaccarino were subpoenaed by the committee after refusing to appear voluntarily.

The hearing began with a somber video featuring victims of child exploitation and their parents. Senator Dick Durbin, the committee chair, noted that the platforms had been used to groom, abduct, and abuse children. He specifically called out Discord, Meta’s Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, and X for their lapses in child safety.

During the hearing, many senators shared personal stories of parents whose children had died by suicide after being exploited online. Senator Lindsey Graham accused the CEOs of having “blood on their hands.” The audience applauded.

Despite years of similar hearings failing to produce new laws, there is growing bipartisan support in Congress for new safety regulations. There are currently more than half a dozen bills dealing with children’s online safety that have been proposed by senators. These include the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) and COPPA 2.0.

Senators have also proposed bills to address child exploitation, including the EARN IT Act and the STOP CSAM Act. None of these have advanced to the Senate floor for a vote. Many of these bills have faced intense lobbying from the tech industry, though some companies in attendance said they were open to some bills and some aspects of the legislation.

Zuckerberg suggested a different approach, saying he supported age verification and parental control requirements at the app store level. “Apple already requires parental consent when a child does a payment with an app, so it should be pretty trivial to pass a law that requires them to make it so parents have control anytime a child downloads an app,” he said.

Meta has come under increased pressure in recent months following a lawsuit from 41 states for harming teens’ mental health. Court documents from the suit allege that Meta turned a blind eye to children under 13 using its service, did little to stop adults from sexually harassing teens on Facebook, and that Zuckerberg personally intervened to stop an effort to ban plastic surgery filters on Instagram.

Unsurprisingly, Zuckerberg came under particular scrutiny during the hearing. In one awkward exchange, Senator Graham asked Zuckerberg if the parents of a child who died by suicide after falling victim to a sextortion scheme should be able to sue Meta. Zuckerberg, looking uncomfortable, paused and said “I think that they can sue us.”

Later, Senator Josh Hawley pressed the Meta founder on whether he would personally apologize to the parents in the hearing room. Zuckerberg stood up and faced the audience. “I’m sorry for everything you have all been through,” he said. “No one should go through the things that your families have suffered and this is why we invest so much and we are going to continue doing industry-wide efforts to make sure no one has to go through the things your families have had to suffer.”

Spiegel was also asked to directly address parents. “Mr. Spiegel, there are a number of parents who have children who have been able to access illegal drugs on your platform, what do you say to those parents,” Scenario Laphonza Butler asked the Snap founder. “I’m so sorry,” he said.

As with many past hearings featuring tech CEOs, some lawmakers strayed off topic. Multiple senators pressed Chew on TikTok’s relationship with China, as well as its handling of content moderation during the Israel-Hamas war. Senator Tom Cotton repeatedly asked TikTok’s CEO about his citizenship.

There were also some bizarre moments, like when Senator John Kennedy asked Spiegel if he knew the meaning of “yada yada yada” (Spiegel claimed he was “not familiar” with the phrase). “Can we agree … what you do is what you believe and everything else is just cottage cheese,” Kennedy asked.

During the hearing, many of the companies touted their existing safety features and parental controls. Yaccarino, who repeatedly claimed that X was a “brand new company,” said X was considering adding parental controls. “Being a 14-month-old company we have reprioritized child protection and safety measures,” she said. “And we have just begun to talk about and discuss how we can enhance those with parental controls.”

In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255 or you can simply dial 988. Crisis Text Line can be reached by texting HOME to 741741 (US), 686868 (Canada), or 85258 (UK). Wikipedia maintains a list of crisis lines for people outside of those countries.
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