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Round-up on compliance issues with online platforms: Instagram

This is the third in a series of six posts on compliance issues with various online platforms.  The first post was about YouTube.  Last week’s post was about Facebook.  Today’s post, the third in the series, will discuss Instagram.  Next week’s post will focus on Twitter.  On April 5, the fifth post in the series will cover Snapchat.  The sixth and last post in the series, on April 12, will be about Reddit.

The photo and video sharing and social media service Instagram was created in 2010 and has been owned by Facebook since 2012. Instagram has evolved massively in popularity, adding users exponentially year after year, and creating features which have inspired huge engagement and imitation on other platforms to take advantage of popular usage of the app, such as thematic hashtags and aesthetically curated content.

In addition to the social media and content sharing aspects of the service, there is a purposeful design intention behind Instagram to create and cultivate a community. For more on the design ethics intentions behind Instagram, and how those compliance considerations have manifested with mixed success or engagement in their values in the community that has emerged on the platform, check out this post.

Alongside the trends set by Instagram, the company has also been no stranger to controversy and criticism. Divisive policy and interface changes, abusive or fraudulent content, and claims of censorship or other inappropriate community management actions, have all drawn negative attention to Instagram.

Check back next Thursday for the fourth post in this series, which will be about current compliance and ethics issues with Twitter.

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