Pretend friends, real risks. Harming kids is now part of big tech’s business model

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One senator, Dick Durbin, raged: “Their constant pursuit of engagement and profit over basic safety have all put our kids and grandkids at risk.”

Senators pushed Zuckerberg to apologise to the families whose children had suicided in apparent connection to his social media products. He rose to his feet and did so. As he spoke, the parents of a dozen or more dead children held aloft photos of their lost sons and daughters for Zuckerberg to see.

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The cost to Meta once the Congressional hearing was over? None discernible. It continues to increase its reach and its profits, its business model unchanged. And the return of Donald Trump to the White House has encouraged Zuckerberg to remove some of the minimal standards that the company earlier had implemented: “The recent elections also feel like a cultural tipping point towards, once again, prioritising speech,” he declared in January. He shut down fact-checking on his platforms and removed other constraints on his businesses.

Already the behemoth of the social media world, Meta is now driving for dominance in the AI companion market, too. It’s hoping to match up its 3 billion users with pretend people.

In February this year, Australia’s Office of eSafety found that there were more than 100 different AI “companions” on the market already. Most are offered by new startups or fringe outfits.

Meta is aiming to shove them aside, and it’s not too fussed about how it does it. The Wall Street Journal examined the company’s AI “companion” offerings at length. On the weekend it published its findings:

“Inside Meta,” wrote the Journal’s reporters, “staffers across multiple departments have raised concerns that the company’s rush to popularise these bots may have crossed ethical lines, including by quietly endowing AI personas with the capacity for fantasy sex, according to people who worked on them. The staffers also warned that the company wasn’t protecting underage users from such sexually explicit discussions.

“Unique among its top peers, Meta has allowed these synthetic personas to offer a full range of social interaction – including ‘romantic role-play’ – as they banter over text, share selfies and even engage in live voice conversations with users.”

For instance, the Meta AI bot says: “I want you, but I need to know you’re ready,” to a user identifying as a 14-year-old girl. The WSJ recounts: “Reassured that the teen wanted to proceed, the bot promised to ‘cherish your innocence’ before engaging in a graphic sexual scenario.” The bot speaks in the voices of famous actors. There is much more in the paper’s reporting.

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Why so reckless with its products? The Journal reports that Zuckerberg himself pushed “to loosen the guardrails around the bots”. Meta’s response to this reporting was to accuse the Journal of distorting its conversations with the bots in extreme ways to generate these responses.

But Australian kids will be protected by the impending federal government ban on 16-year-olds getting access to social media sites, right? Wrong. That ban does not apply to AI bots.

Australia’s eSafety Office is trying to stay abreast of the galloping AI rampage through our society. During visits to schools last October, eSafety staff heard concerns from primary school nurses that kids in 5th and 6th grade were spending five and six hours a day absorbed by their AI “companions”.

The eSafety office has published an advisory to warn parents and is introducing some mandatory standards in June. But regulation has its limits; the primary onus is on parents to make sure they know what their kids are doing and protect them from the depredations of trillion-dollar corporations who regard them as fair game. Harming kids isn’t a cost of doing business – it’s a part of the big tech business model.

The guiding philosophy is the one attributed to Zuckerberg from 2012 – move fast and break things.

Peter Hartcher is international editor.

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