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Harmful content surges on Meta Platforms after policy rollbacks, report says

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"Rise in 'harmful content' since Meta policy rollbacks: survey", June 17, 2025

Harmful content, including hate speech, has surged across Meta's platforms since the company ended third-party fact-checking in the United States and eased moderation policies, a survey showed.

The survey of around 7,000 active users on Instagram, Facebook and Threads comes after the Palo Alto company ditched US fact-checkers in January and turned over the task of debunking falsehoods to ordinary users under a model known as "Community Notes," popularised by X.

The decision was widely seen as an attempt to appease President Donald Trump's new administration, whose conservative support base has long complained that fact-checking on tech platforms was a way to curtail free speech and censor right-wing content.

Meta also rolled back restrictions around topics such as gender and sexual identity. The tech giant's updated community guidelines said its platforms would permit users to accuse people of "mental illness" or "abnormality" based on their gender or sexual orientation.

One in six respondents in the survey reported being the victim of some form of gender-based or sexual violence on Meta platforms, while 66 percent said they had witnessed harmful content such as hateful or violent material.

Ninety-two percent of surveyed users said they were concerned about increasing harmful content and felt "less protected from being exposed to or targeted by" such material on Meta's platforms.

Seventy-seven percent of respondents described feeling "less safe" expressing themselves freely.

The company declined to comment on the survey.

In its most recent quarterly report, published in May, Meta insisted that the changes in January had left a minimal impact.

...

But the groups behind the survey insisted that the report did not reflect users' experiences of targeted hate and harassment.

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"Facebook and Instagram already had an equity problem. Now, it's out of control," Sherman added.

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