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Instagram to alert parents if teens search for suicide, self-harm content
Instagram will begin notifying parents if their teenagers repeatedly search for suicide or self-harm-related terms on the platform.
This is according to updates shared on its official blog post.
The new feature will roll out in the coming weeks to parents enrolled in the platform’s parental supervision tools.
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**What Instagram said **
According to Instagram, searches that may trigger an alert include phrases encouraging suicide or self-harm, phrases suggesting a teen may be at risk, and general terms such as “suicide” or “self-harm.
It added that the threshold for alerts requires multiple searches within a short time frame, while aiming to avoid unnecessary notifications that could reduce effectiveness.
**Backstory **
The decision comes amid intensifying legal and public scrutiny over teen wellbeing online, particularly related to harmful content, addictive design, and lack of effective protection tools.
In recent months, Meta has faced multiple lawsuits in the United States accusing it of failing to protect children on its platforms and designing systems that contribute to addiction and psychological harm.
The company’s executives, including Instagram head Adam Mosseri, were questioned over the company’s rollout of safety features and the challenge of balancing privacy and child protection.
In a separate case before the Los Angeles County Superior Court, internal Meta research presented in court suggested that parental supervision tools had a limited impact on compulsive social media use among children. The study also indicated that children experiencing stressful life events were more likely to struggle with regulating their usage.
**More details **
The alerts will begin launching next week in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada, with additional regions to follow later in the year.
Instagram also said it plans to expand the feature in the future to trigger notifications when a teen attempts to engage the app’s artificial intelligence tools in conversations related to suicide or self-harm.
The company maintained that it will continue to monitor feedback and refine the system to balance parental awareness with user privacy.
**What you should know **
Instagram’s decision to alert parents builds directly on safety reforms the company began rolling out months earlier, as scrutiny over youth protection intensified.
YouTube has similarly faced scrutiny over how its recommendation systems affect children. In 2021, lawmakers called out Instagram and YouTube for promoting accounts featuring content depicting extreme weight loss and dieting to young users.
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