Moseeri: Instagram to restore chronological feed

San Francisco, Dec 9 : Meta-owned photo-sharing platform Instagram is reportedly working on a version of its feed that would show users posts in chronological order, the companys head Adam Mosseri said during a hearing before a Senate subcommittee.

The companys algorithmically sorted feed, introduced in 2016, and then updated in 2017 to include recommended posts, is widely disliked by users who prefer to have their posts and their friends posts surface in a timely manner, The Verge reported.

The current feed uses AI to create what Instagram considers a more personalised feed, based on users activity.But it has remained generally unpopular among a vast swath of users, despite the companys assertions otherwise.

Mosseri appeared before the Senate subcommittee on Wednesday where he was grilled by senators about child safety issues on the app, prompted in part by revelations from whistleblower Frances Haugen, who provided internal documents to The Wall Street Journal that suggested the company was aware its app may be "toxic" for teenagers.During his testimony, Mosseri proposed the creation of an "industry body" that would determine best practices over the handling of childrens data and parental controls to help keep children safe online.

పుష్ప కేశవ పాత్రలో ఆ హీరో చేయాల్సి ఉంది.. వైరల్ అవుతున్న సుకుమార్ కామెంట్స్!...

The body would receive input from parents, regulators and civil society, to create universal standards and protections.Mosseri said platforms would need to earn the protections of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act by following those standards.

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Senators seemed skeptical that such an an "industry body" could be effective, the report said.On Tuesday, Instagram has rolled out the "Take a Break" feature it started testing last month to users in the US and other countries.

vc/vd Mosseri suggested, during his testimony, the creation of an industry body that would establish best practices for handling childrens data.It would also provide parental controls to keep children safe onlineOn Wednesday, Mosseri appeared before a Senate subcommittee.

Senators grilled him about child safety issues with the app.This was prompted in part, Frances Haugens whistleblower revelations.She provided internal documents to The Wall Street Journal indicating that the company knew its app was "toxic" for teens.

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