Wednesday, 08 Oct 2025

Meta strengthens teen safety with expanded accounts

Meta introduced Teen Accounts to Facebook and Messenger while launching a School Partnership Program for U.S. educators to report bullying within 48 hours.


Meta strengthens teen safety with expanded accounts
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Since then, adoption has been strong: 97% of teens ages 13-15 kept the default settings, and 94% of parents say Teen Accounts are helpful. Now, Meta is expanding those protections beyond Instagram. Teen Accounts are coming to Facebook and Messenger worldwide, bringing stronger safety standards to more of the apps teens use every day.

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Teen Accounts automatically apply safety limits, including:

Meta says these measures address parents' top concerns, giving teens more control while reassuring families that their online experiences are safer.

Adam Mosseri, head of Instagram, emphasized the goal, saying, "We want parents to feel good about their teens using social media. ... Teen Accounts are designed to give parents peace of mind." 

"Misleading and dangerously speculative reports such as this one undermine the important conversation about teen safety," Meta told CyberGuy, "This report repeatedly misrepresents our efforts to empower parents and protect teens, misstating how our safety tools work and how millions of parents and teens are using them today. 

"Teen Accounts lead the industry because they provide automatic safety protections and straightforward parental controls. The reality is teens who were placed into these protections saw less sensitive content, experienced less unwanted contact and spent less time on Instagram at night. Parents also have robust tools at their fingertips, from limiting usage to monitoring interactions. We'll continue improving our tools, and we welcome constructive feedback. But this report is not that."

Meta is also extending protections to the classroom. The School Partnership Program is now available to every middle school and high school in the U.S. Through this program, educators can report issues such as bullying or unsafe content directly from Instagram.

Reports receive prioritized review, typically within 48 hours. Schools that join also get:

Educators who piloted the program praised the improved response times and stronger protections for students. 

Beyond apps and schools, Meta partnered with Childhelp to create a nationwide online safety curriculum tailored for middle schoolers. The lessons cover how to recognize online exploitation, what steps to take if a friend needs help and how to use reporting tools effectively.

The program has already reached hundreds of thousands of students, with a goal of teaching one million middle school students in the coming year. A peer-led version, developed with LifeSmarts, empowers high school students to share the curriculum with younger peers, making the safety conversation more relatable.

For parents, Teen Accounts mean extra protection is in place without needing a complicated setup. Your teen gets safer defaults by default, giving you peace of mind. For educators, the School Partnership Program provides a direct connection to Meta, ensuring reports of unsafe behavior get attention quickly. Students benefit too, with a curriculum designed to give them practical tools for navigating online life safely.

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Meta's expansion of Teen Accounts marks a major shift in how social platforms approach safety. By adding built-in protections, the company reduces risks for teens without requiring parents to manage every setting. At the same time, the School Partnership Program gives educators new tools to protect students in real time. The online safety curriculum goes one step further by teaching kids how to recognize threats and respond confidently. Still, advocacy groups and independent researchers question whether these efforts are enough, and Meta's strong defense shows just how high the stakes are in the teen safety debate. As teens spend more of their lives online, the responsibility to protect them grows. The real test will be how well these tools hold up against evolving online threats.

Do you think Meta's new measures are enough to protect teens, or should tech companies do even more? Let us know by writing to us at CyberGuy.com/Contact

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