From The Asian Reporter, V34, #01 (January 1, 2024), page 8.
Social media companies made $11 billion in U.S. ad
revenue from minors, Harvard study finds
By Barbara Ortutay and Haleluya Hadero
The Associated Press
AR cartoon by Jonathan Hill
Social media companies collectively made more than $11 billion in
U.S. advertising revenue from minors last year, according to a study
from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health published in late
December.
The researchers say the findings show a need for government
regulation of social media since the companies that stand to make money
from children who use their platforms have failed to meaningfully
self-regulate. They note such regulations, as well as greater
transparency from tech companies, could help alleviate harms to youth
mental health and curtail potentially harmful advertising practices that
target children and adolescents.
To come up with the revenue figure, the researchers estimated the
number of users under age 18 on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, X
(formerly Twitter), and YouTube in 2022 based on population data from
the U.S. Census and survey data from Common Sense Media and Pew
Research. They then used data from research firm eMarketer, now called
Insider Intelligence, and Qustodio, a parental control app, to estimate
each platform’s U.S. ad revenue in 2022 and the time children spent per
day on each platform. After that, the researchers said they built a
simulation model using the data to estimate how much ad revenue the
platforms earned from minors in the U.S.
Researchers and lawmakers have long focused on the negative effects
stemming from social media platforms, whose personally-tailored
algorithms can drive children towards excessive use. This year,
lawmakers in states like New York and Utah introduced or passed
legislation that would curb social media use among kids, citing harms to
youth mental health and other concerns.
Meta, which owns Instagram and Facebook, is also being sued by dozens
of states for allegedly contributing to the mental health crisis.
"Although social media platforms may claim that they can
self-regulate their practices to reduce the harms to young people, they
have yet to do so, and our study suggests they have overwhelming
financial incentives to continue to delay taking meaningful steps to
protect children," said Bryn Austin, a professor in the Department of
Social and Behavioral Sciences at Harvard and a senior author on the
study.
The platforms themselves don’t make public how much money they earn
from minors.
Social media platforms are not the first to advertise to children,
and parents and experts have long expressed concerns about marketing to
kids online, on television, and even in schools. But online ads can be
especially insidious because they can be targeted to children and
because the line between ads and the content kids seek out is often
blurry.
In a 2020 policy paper, the American Academy of Pediatrics said
children are "uniquely vulnerable to the persuasive effects of
advertising because of immature critical thinking skills and impulse
inhibition."
"School-aged children and teenagers may be able to recognize
advertising but often are not able to resist it when it is embedded
within trusted social networks, encouraged by celebrity influencers, or
delivered next to personalized content," the paper noted.
As concerns about social media and children’s mental health grow, the
Federal Trade Commission earlier this month proposed sweeping changes to
a decades-old law that regulates how online companies can track and
advertise to children. The proposed changes include turning off targeted
ads to kids under 13 by default and limiting push notifications.
According to the Harvard study, YouTube derived the greatest ad
revenue from users 12 and under ($959.1 million), followed by Instagram
($801.1 million) and Facebook ($137.2 million).
Instagram, meanwhile, derived the greatest ad revenue from users
between the ages of 13 and 17 ($4 billion), followed by TikTok ($2
billion) and YouTube ($1.2 billion).
The researchers also estimate that Snapchat derived the greatest
share of its overall 2022 ad revenue from users under 18 (41%), followed
by TikTok (35%), YouTube (27%), and Instagram (16%).
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