Meta deploys AI to scan photos and videos for visual clues that users are under 13 and should be removed
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Meta has announced it is using AI to analyze photos and videos on Facebook and Instagram for visual indicators that a user may be under 13, including physical cues such as height and bone structure. The company was careful to distinguish the system from facial recognition, stating that the AI looks at general visual themes rather than identifying specific individuals, and combines those visual insights with analysis of text and behavioral signals including birthday celebrations, mentions of school grades, and contextual clues across posts, comments, bios, and captions. If the system determines that an account holder may be underage, Meta will deactivate the account and require the user to complete an age verification process to avoid permanent deletion. The visual analysis system is currently operating in select countries with a broader rollout planned, and Meta said it intends to expand the technology to Instagram Live and Facebook Groups in the future.The announcement arrives weeks after a New Mexico jury ordered Meta to pay $375 million in civil penalties for misleading consumers about platform safety and putting children at risk, with the court also ordering fundamental changes to how Meta operates its platforms.
Meta has since threatened to shut down its services in New Mexico in response to those requirements. The child safety lawsuit landscape facing Meta and other major technology companies is extensive, and the AI age detection rollout represents both a genuine product investment in underage account removal and a legal defense posture that demonstrates active platform-level enforcement efforts. Meta is simultaneously expanding its Teen Accounts feature, which places users identified as teenagers into a stricter experience with DM restrictions, hidden harmful comments, and private-by-default settings, to 27 countries in the EU and Brazil, with Facebook in the US receiving the same treatment for the first time followed by the UK and EU in June.