The platform will maintain access to playful filters that add elements like animal ears or create obvious comedic distortions. However, the restrictions target subtle beautifying effects that create smoother skin, longer eyelashes, and slimmer faces - modifications that can be challenging to detect and potentially harmful to young users' self-image.
Dr. Nikki Soo, TikTok's Safety and Well-being Public Policy Lead for Europe, has confirmed these restrictions will be implemented globally. This decision comes in response to findings from Internet Matters, a children's online safety organization, which revealed that beautifying filters were contributing to a distorted perception of reality where edited images have become normalized. The research highlighted that children often struggle to identify altered images and face considerable social pressure to maintain specific appearances online.
The platform is expanding its safety measures across 13 European countries by introducing resources that connect users to local helplines when they report content related to suicide, self-harm, hate, and harassment. With over 175 million monthly active users in Europe, TikTok's European public policy head, Christine Grahn, emphasized on LinkedIn that safety and security remain ongoing priorities for the platform.
Additionally, TikTok is developing machine-learning technologies to identify accounts created by users under 13, which is below the platform's minimum age requirement. The company removes approximately six million underage accounts annually and maintains an appeals process for users who believe their accounts were incorrectly removed.
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