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‘Marketplace for predators’: Meta faces jury trial over child exploitation claims

about 3 hours ago
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Meta’s second major trial of 2026 over alleged harms to children begins on Monday.The landmark jury trial in Santa Fe pits the New Mexico attorney general’s office against the social media giant.The state alleges that the company knowingly enabled predators to use Facebook and Instagram to exploit children.The trial will introduce evidence that Raúl Torrez, the state’s attorney general, believes shows how Meta’s social networks create dangerous environments for children, exposing them to sexual exploitation, solicitation, sextortion and human trafficking.The lawsuit states that Meta’s design choices and profit incentives prioritized engagement over child safety and that it failed to implement effective safeguards.

The state accuses the company of allowing unmoderated groups devoted to commercial sex and of facilitating the buying, selling, and sharing of child sexual abuse material (CSAM).“While the New Mexico attorney general makes sensationalist, irrelevant and distracting arguments by cherry-picking select documents, we’re focused on demonstrating our longstanding commitment to supporting young people,” a Meta spokesperson said.“For over a decade, we’ve listened to parents, worked with experts and law enforcement, and conducted in-depth research to understand the issues that matter most.We use these insights to make meaningful changes – like introducing Teen Accounts with built-in protections and providing parents with tools to manage their teens’ experiences.We’re proud of the progress we’ve made, and we’re always working to do better.

”The lawsuit follows a two-year Guardian investigation, published in 2023, which revealed that the tech giant was struggling to prevent people from using its platforms to traffick children.The investigation is cited several times in the suit’s filings.In an interview with the Guardian in 2024, Torrez said he believes Meta is the “largest marketplace for predators and paedophiles globally”.After a week of jury selection, opening statements are set to begin on 9 February, followed by the presentation of evidence.The proceedings are expected to be about seven weeks long.

Social media companies have long maintained they are not responsible for crimes committed via their networks because of a US federal law that generally protects platforms from legal liability for content created by their users, section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.Meta’s attempts to invoke section 230 and the first amendment to get the case dismissed were ultimately denied in a judge’s ruling in June 2024, due to the lawsuit’s focus on Meta’s platform product design and other non-speech issues, such as internal decisions about content and curation.The New Mexico trial comes just a week after a high-profile case began in Los Angeles, in which hundreds of US families and schools allege that Meta, Snap, TikTok, and YouTube have harmed children.The plaintiffs in the LA lawsuit allege the platforms knowingly addicted young users, leading to depression, eating disorders, self-harm and other mental health problems.The proceedings involve about 1,600 plaintiffs, including more than 350 families and 250 school districts.

Snap and TikTok reached settlements with the plaintiffs, while Meta and YouTube remain on trial.Each company has denied wrongdoing.“The fact that these cases are going to trial proves the section 230 dam is breaking and social media platforms,” said Sacha Haworth, executive director of the Tech Oversight Project.“These are the trials of a generation; just as the world watched courtrooms hold big tobacco and big pharma accountable, we will for the first time see big tech CEOs take the stand.”Key witnesses for the plaintiffs in the New Mexico suit are expected to include educators and law enforcement officials, who will speak about the alleged harms and crimes they have witnessed take place on Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, and whistleblowers, who may reveal internal company discussions.

Teens and families who have experienced harm on the platforms are not anticipated to take the stand.Torrez and his team have already taken Meta chief Mark Zuckerberg’s deposition, and may play portions of it in court if he does not attend.New Mexico’s jurisdiction limits its ability to compel out-of-state witnesses to testify in person.On the lawsuit’s journey to the courtroom, the attorney general’s office has made several disclosures with fresh allegations.They include that Meta may have profited by placing advertisements from companies such as Walmart and Match Group alongside content that sexualized children, according to internal documents and emails.

Internal Meta documents obtained by the attorney general’s office show the company estimates that roughly 100,000 children on Facebook and Instagram experience online sexual harassment each day.Filings unveiled chat excerpts of users allegedly discussing how to lure minors into engaging with them sexually.A former Instagram employee testified in 2023 before Congress that his own daughter had received unwanted sexual advances on Instagram.When he notified senior Meta leadership, he said he was ignored.Among the evidence expected to be presented in court are details of the 2024 arrest of three men charged with sexually preying on children through Meta’s platforms.

This was part of an investigation dubbed “Operation MetaPhile” by the attorney general’s office.Undercover agents posing as children were contacted by the suspects, who allegedly solicited them for sex after finding minors through design features on Facebook and Instagram.The agents did not initiate any conversations about sexual activity, according to the state attorney general.Following a surge of activity from adults to one of these undercover agent’s accounts, Meta did not shut it down, and instead sent it information about how to monetize accounts and grow followings.A filing last week revealed allegations that Zuckerberg approved allowing minors to access AI chatbot companions despite warnings from the company’s safety staff that the bots could engage in sexual interactions.

Internal emails and messages cited in the filings reportedly show that “Meta, driven by Zuckerberg, rejected the recommendations of its integrity staff and declined to impose reasonable guardrails to prevent children from being subject to sexually exploitative conversations with its AI chatbots”.The documents detail an internal chat in March 2024 about parental controls for minors using AI chatbots on Meta’s platforms; one employee asked whether parents could disable the chatbots for their children.Another employee responded that it was a “Mark-level decision that parents cannot turn it off”.
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Should the Australian Open finals be played at an earlier time? | Simon Cambers and Joey Lynch

The first time I covered the Australian Open, in 2001, the final began at 2pm. Andre Agassi beat Arnaud Clement in a lopsided final that lasted one hour, 46 minutes. This year marked my 18th visit and on Sunday I wondered aloud (on the internet) why, since 2005, the Australian Open men’s final has been played at night, when Wimbledon, the US Open and Roland-Garros are all afternoon starts.Overseas broadcast rights are incredibly lucrative, of course. Tennis Australia has invested millions of dollars in the expansion and improvement of Melbourne Park and the Australian Open, paying the players far more prize money than in the past

about 10 hours ago
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Brighterdaysahead topples favourite Lossiemouth to win Irish Champion Hurdle

There was a full-throated roar from the stands as the 2026 Dublin racing festival finally got under way on Sunday and another as Lossiemouth, the favourite, went to post for the Irish Champion Hurdle later in the afternoon, but the cheers 10 minutes later were for her market rival, Brighterdaysahead, as Gordon Elliott’s mare convincingly reversed the form of the December Hurdle here last month to win the big race of the day.Lossiemouth and Brighterdaysahead were foaled within three weeks of each other in March 2019 but last month’s Grade One was the first time that the two mares had met on the track.Lossiemouth emerged as the winner by a length, recording a ninth Grade One win in the process, but she did not look comfortable at any stage here on Sunday as El Fabiolo, a stable companion at the Willie Mullins yard, set a steady pace with Brighterdaysahead in close attendance.Paul Townend, Lossiemouth’s rider, made some ground on the turn for home as El Fabiolo dropped away, but Jack Kennedy soon pushed Brighterdaysahead into a useful lead and a good jump at the last set the seal on a three-and-a-quarter length success.The result prompted some abrupt and significant moves in the ante-post betting for next month’s Cheltenham festival, as Lossiemouth, who set off as the narrow favourite for the Champion Hurdle on 10 March, was pushed out to a top price of 7-1 and simultaneously cut to around 11-10 for the Mares’ Hurdle, a race she has won in the past two seasons, on 12 March

about 16 hours ago
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Tuskegee basketball coach ‘violated’ after being handcuffed by police at end of game

Tuskegee men’s basketball coach Benjy Taylor is considering legal action after being handcuffed and led off court at the end of his team’s loss to Morehouse College on Saturday.Tuskegee athletic director Reginald Ruffin said Taylor had attempted to make sure protocols were followed when opposing Morehouse football players joining the basketball players in the postgame handshake line.“You don’t do that … that’s a security breach,” Ruffin told HBCU Gameday. “We have security measures for our protection of our officials, our student athlete coaches and spectators.”Videos of the incident soon spread online

about 16 hours ago
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Nel Metcalfe hat-trick puts Gloucester-Hartpury top as World Cup bounce goes on

The English top flight returned from a six-week break with impressive crowds continuing to benefit from the post-Rugby World Cup bounce and the battle for top four spots as tight as ever. While only six points separate third from sixth in the Women’s Premiership, the reigning champions, Gloucester-Hartpury, once again proved their superiority with a seven-try 45-26 win over Loughborough that lifted them above Saracens at the top of the table.Gloucester are now five points clear of Saracens, who did not play like weekend, and 12 of the chasing pack as they continued their unbeaten run with their last league defeat coming in November 2024. The defending champions underlined their intent for a fourth consecutive title with a stunning home display. The Wales international Nel Metcalfe was the star for the hosts with a 24-minute first-half hat-trick

about 18 hours ago
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Harry Brook blocks out the noise to lead England to T20 series win in Sri Lanka

Numerous apologies, serious scrutiny and, still, he goes and does that. Harry Brook’s 12-ball 36 helped England chase down a revised target of 168 in the second Twenty20 international against Sri Lanka, securing a series victory.England had initially been set 190, but a rain break changed the equation; when Brook emerged England needed 87 from 7.5 overs. He put on an exhibition over the off side to turn the chase his team’s way

about 20 hours ago
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Sri Lanka v England: second men’s cricket T20 international – as it happened

And that’s that from Pallekele. Thanks for sticking with us despite the downpour. Another good win for England, with Buttler, Banton and Brook bringing England home with two balls to spare. It was a closer game than Friday’s but Sri Lanka lost crucial momentum in the last half of their innings.We’ll be back on Tuesday for the final T20 of this World Cup warm-up

about 20 hours ago
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UK hospitality firms demand more help with business rates amid questions over Heathrow discount

about 21 hours ago
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Employers are spreading raises like peanut butter – and workers are paying the price | Gene Marks

about 23 hours ago
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What is Moltbook? The strange new social media site for AI bots

about 9 hours ago
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‘It’s really sad’: US TikTok users rethink app over concerns about privacy and censorship

about 21 hours ago
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‘Work of art’: Japanese volleyballer takes sorry to extremes with headfirst sliding apology

about 7 hours ago
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UK Sport urges BBC to boost coverage of Olympic sports between Games

about 8 hours ago