The EU Leads a Probe Into Instagram
The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC), the EU’s data regulator for Facebook, is launching an investigation into Instagram’s handling of kids’ information.
The investigation was prompted by a 2019 study by data analyst, David Stier, who uncovered startling information about Instagram’s exposure of young users’ personal data. Stier found that over 60 million Instagram users under the age of 18 were given the chance to change their personal accounts into business accounts.
Business accounts on Instagram publicly display the user’s phone number and email address. This means that any underage user who converted their profile into a business account exposed their email address and phone number.
To make matters worse, the same emails and phone numbers were also embedded in the HTML source code of web pages accessed by those Instagram users on a computer. This allowed hackers to data harvest the personal information of young users.
A Facebook spokesperson responded to Stier’s findings in a statement to BBC News, saying:
Despite the fact that Facebook denies Stier’s claims, and now lets users with business accounts opt-out of displaying personal information, the DPC is still going forward with the investigation.
The DPC is probing the social media giant on two matters. The first pertains to Facebook’s legal right to process kids’ data, while the other investigation deals with whether Instagram’s profile settings can properly accommodate children.
The DPC Deputy Commissioner, Graham Doyle, also spoke to BBC about potential child endangerment on Instagram, stating:
If the DPC finds any violation during its probe, Facebook will incur a hefty fine.
Making Instagram Safe for Kids
Making Instagram safe for underage users might seem like an insurmountable task. After all, Instagram still has yet to implement solid parental controls. This will likely force parents to monitor their child’s activity on their smartphone and computer.