Top social media companies, including TikTok, YouTube and Snapchat are facing a hearing at the US Congress over weird challenges of steeling and vandalizing school properties by the children and teens on these apps.
The Senate Commerce Committee said the popular apps have been misused to harm children and promote destructive acts, such as vandalism in schools, deadly viral challenges, bullying, eating disorders and manipulative influencer marketing.
In prepared testimony, Michael Beckerman, head of public policy for the Americas at TikTok, said that his company’s moderation teams is already working to quickly remove any such content.
The “devious licks”, a viral trend on TikTok, encouraged students to steal from schools or vandalize their property.
TikTok is working to remove this content and redirect hashtags and search results to discourage such behavior, Beckerman said, adding that the company has issued special guidance to its teams on this violative content and proactively detected and removed content, including videos and hashtags.
In another prepared testimony, Snapchat’s global public policy vice president Jennifer Stout said that the company is not designed for content to go viral and is instead focused on conversations between friends.
YouTube’s public affairs vice president Leslie Miller is expected to defend that the company strives to encourage healthy habits, and to ensure that children see only age-appropriate material.
The Big Tech’s are already facing an inquiry by the US lawmakers over alleged negative influence on competition, society and children.