How can you allow this Senators accuse Snapchat TikTok of fostering dangerous behavior
Facebook is no longer the only social media company in Congressâ crosshairs for potentially causing harm to Americaâs children.
Executives from Snapchat and TikTok made their first appearances before Congress on Tuesday, entering a new stage in the threatened crackdown on tech from lawmakers.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, Connecticut Democrat, argued that teenage insecurity, hate and anxiety are exacerbated by tech platforms looking to hook kids on their products. He told representatives from Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube that they could not avoid lawmakersâ ire by simply not being Facebook.
SEE ALSO: Senatorâs staff poses as a teen on Snapchat, gets lewd content, invite to âsexualized video gameâ
âI understand from your testimony that your defense is âweâre not Facebook, weâre different, and weâre different from each other.â Being different from Facebook is not a defense,â Mr. Blumenthal said at a hearing before the Senate Commerce Committeeâs subcommittee on consumer protection and data security. âThat bar is in the gutter. Itâs not a defense to say that you are different.â
The tech platform executives sought to distance themselves from the social media industry at large, with Snap Inc. Vice President Jennifer Stout informing lawmakers that her platform describes itself as a âcamera company.â
In her testimony, Ms. Stout insisted that her company was different from other tech platforms that sparked anger among lawmakers.
âSnapchat was built as an antidote to social media,â she said.
But lawmakers painted a different picture through their own experiences on various platforms. Sen. Mike Lee, Utah Republican, said his staffers created a Snapchat account posing as a young teenager and were soon bombarded with inappropriate content including an âinvite to play an online sexualized video gameâ and articles about âporn stars,â among other things.
Ms. Stout said she was âunfamiliarâ with the content shown to his fake account but stressed that content promoted within Snapchat is not hurtful or illegal.
Details about which advertisers were responsible for the content Mr. Leeâs team saw and whether other digital activity may have yielded targeted content were not immediately clear.
TikTok similarly faced accusations that it enabled dangerous behavior from teenagers. Sen. Marsha Blackburn, Tennessee Republican, said lawmakers have allowed social media platforms to promote and glorify dangerous content for teens.
âKids as young as nine have died doing viral challenges on TikTok and weâve seen teen girls lured into inappropriate sexual relationships with predators on Snapchat,â she said. âYouâre parents, how can you allow this?â
Similar to Snapchat, TikTok sought to distance itself from other prominent social media platforms like Facebook that focus on peopleâs relationships with others.
âTikTok is not a social network based on followers or social graph,â said Michael Beckerman, TikTok vice president. âItâs not an app that people check to see what their friends are doing. You watch TikToks. You create on TikTok.â
Lawmakers also raised concerns about who is watching over Americansâ data on TikTok, particularly kidsâ information. Sen. Ted Cruz, Texas Republican, repeatedly pressed Mr. Beckerman for information about whether TikTokâs fine print gives the Chinese Communist Party access to Americansâ data.
Mr. Beckerman accused Mr. Cruz of asking âgotcha questionsâ and Mr. Cruz said Mr. Beckerman was behaving as someone âhiding something.â
While the lawmakers applied pressure to the tech platform executives, a consensus has yet to emerge about a single legislative fix. Mr. Blumenthal, who leads the subcommittee, said parents should not be the only ones in charge of their kidsâ experiences online.
âAll of this research and facts and disclosures sent a message to Americaâs parents: You cannot trust Big Tech with your kids. The parents of America cannot trust these apps with their children,â he said. âAnd Big Tech cannot say to parents, âYou must be the gatekeepers. You must be the social media copilots. You must be the app police.â Because parents should not have to bear that burden alone.â
Mr. Blumenthal said he wanted âstronger rulesâ to protect kids and âreal transparency, real accountabilityâ from the tech platforms.
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