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Instagrams Reels video feed reportedly recommends risqu footage of children as well as overtly sexual adult videos to adult users who follow children with some of the disturbing content placed next to ads from major companies.

In one instance, an ad promoting the dating app Bumble was sandwiched between a video of a person caressing a life-size latex doll and another clip of an underage girl exposing her midriff, according to the Wall Street Journal, which set up test accounts to probe Instagrams algorithm.

In other cases, Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta-owned app showed a Pizza Hut commercial next to a video of a man laying in bed with a purported 10-year-old girl, while a Walmart ad was displayed next to a video of a woman exposing her crotch.

The shocking results were revealed as Meta faces a sweeping legal challenge from dozens of states alleging the company has failed to prevent underage users from joining Instagram or to shield them from harmful content.

It also comes on the heels of dozens of blue-chirp firms pulling their advertising from Elon Musk’s X platform after their promos appeared next to posts touting Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party. The exodus is expected to reportedly cost the site formerly known as Twitter as much as $75 million in revenue this year.

Meta now faces its own advertiser revolt after some companies cited in the study suspended ads on all its platforms, which include Facebook, following Monday’s report by the Journal.

The Journal’s test accounts followed only young gymnasts, cheerleaders and other teen and preteen influencers active on the platform.

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“Thousands of followers of such young peoples accounts often include large numbers of adult men, and that many of the accounts who followed those children also had demonstrated interest in sex content related to both children and adults, the outlet found.

The Reels feed presented to test accounts became even more disturbing after the Journals reporters followed adult users who were already following children-related content.

The algorithm purportedly displayed a mix of adult pornography and child-sexualizing material, such as a video of a clothed girl caressing her torso and another of a child pantomiming a sex act.

When reached for comment, a Meta spokesperson argued the tests were a manufactured experience that does not reflect the experience of most users.

We dont want this kind of content on our platforms and brands dont want their ads to appear next to it, a Meta spokesperson said in a statement. We continue to invest aggressively to stop it – and report every quarter on the prevalence of such content, which remains very low.

Our systems are effective at reducing harmful content and weve invested billions in safety, security and brand suitability solutions, the spokesperson added. We tested Reels for nearly a year before releasing it widely – with a robust set of safety controls and measures.

Meta noted that it has approximately 40,000 employees globally dedicated to ensuring the safety and integrity of its platforms.

The company asserted that the spread of such content is relatively small, with just three to four views of posts that violate its policies per every 10,000 views on Instagram.

However, current and former Meta employees reportedly told the Journal that the tendency of the companys algorithms to present child sex content users was known internally to be a problem even before Reels was released in 2020 to compete with popular video app TikTok.

The Journal’s findings followed a June report by the publication that revealed Instagrams recommendation algorithms fueled what it described as a vast pedophile network that advertised the sale of child-sex material on the platform.

That report prompted Meta to block access to thousands of additional search terms on Instagram and to set up an internal task force to crack down on the illegal content.

Nonetheless, several major companies expressed outrage or disappointment over the companys handling of their ads including Match Group, the parent company of Tinder, which has reportedly pulled all of its ads for its major companies from Meta-owned apps.

Most companies sign deals stipulating that their ads should not appear next to sexually-charged or explicit content.

We have no desire to pay Meta to market our brands to predators or place our ads anywhere near this content, Match spokeswoman Justine Sacco said in a statement.

Bumble spokesman Robbie McKay said the dating app would never intentionally advertise adjacent to inappropriate content and has since suspended advertising on Meta platforms.

A Disney representative said the company had brought the problem to the highest levels at Meta to be addressed, while Hinge said it will push Meta to take more action.

The Canadian Center for Child Protection, a nonprofit dedicated to child safety, purportedly got similar results after conducting its own tests. The Post has reached out to the group for comment.

Time and time again, weve seen recommendation algorithms drive users to discover and then spiral inside of these online child exploitation communities, the centers executive director Lianna McDonald told the Journal.

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UK

Rachel Reeves is celebrating the Bank of England’s interest cut – but behind the scenes she has little to cheer

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Rachel Reeves is celebrating the Bank of England's interest cut – but behind the scenes she has little to cheer

The economy is stagnating and job losses are mounting. Now is the time to cut interest rates again.

That was the view of the Bank of England’s nine-member rate setting committee on Thursday.

Well, at least five of them.

The other four presented us with a different view: Inflation is above target and climbing – this is no time to cut interest rates.

Who is right? All of them and none of them.

Central bankers have been backed into a corner by the current economic climate and navigating a path out is challenging.

The difficulty in charting that route was on display as the Bank struggled to decide on the best course of monetary policy.

The committee had to take it to a re-vote for the first time in the Bank’s history.

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Bank of England is ‘a bit muddled’

On one side, central bankers – including Andrew Bailey – were swayed by the data on the economy. Growth is “subdued”, they said, and job losses are mounting.

This should weigh on wage increases, which are already moderating, and in turn inflation.

One member, Alan Taylor, was so worried about the economy he initially suggested a larger half a percentage point cut.

On the other side, their colleagues were alarmed by inflation.

The Bank upgraded its inflation forecasts, with the headline index expected to hit 4% in September.

In a blow to the chancellor, the September figure is used to uprate a number of benefits and pensions. The Bank lifted it from a previous forecast of 3.75%.

In explaining the increase, the Bank blamed higher utility bills and food prices.

Food price inflation could hit 5.5% this year, an increase driven by poor harvests, some expensive packaging regulations as well as higher employment costs arising from the Autumn Budget.

Rachel Reeves on Thursday. Pic: PA
Image:
Rachel Reeves on Thursday. Pic: PA

When pressed by Sky News on the main contributor to that increase – poor harvests or government policy – the governor said: “It’s about 50-50.”

The Bank doesn’t like to get political but nothing about this is flattering for the chancellor.

The Bank said food retailers, including supermarkets, were passing on higher national insurance and living wage costs – the ones announced in the Autumn Budget – to customers.

Economists at the Bank pointed out that food retailers employ a large proportion of low wage workers and are more vulnerable to the lowering of the national insurance threshold because they have a larger proportion of part-time workers.

The danger doesn’t end there.

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Of all the types of inflation, food price inflation is among the most dangerous.

Households spend 11% of their disposable income, meaning higher food price inflation can play an outsized role in our perception of how high overall inflation in the economy is.

When that happens, workers are more likely to push for pay rises, a dangerous loop that can lead to higher inflation.

So while the chancellor is publicly celebrating the Bank’s fifth interest rate cut in a year, behind the scenes she will have very little to cheer.

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UK

Tropical Storm Dexter to bring potential heatwave next week

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Tropical Storm Dexter to bring potential heatwave next week

Remnants of Tropical Storm Dexter will bring an increase in temperatures over the weekend, with highs of 34C possible next week.

A heatwave could be registered in parts of the South early next week and could spread more widely if temperatures hold.

Temperatures of 28C (82F) are possible in the South on Sunday, reaching 30C (86F) across parts of England on Monday before getting closer to 34C (93F) on Tuesday.

Pic: Joe Giddens/PA
Image:
Pic: Joe Giddens/PA

Warm and muggy nights are to be expected, especially in the South.

Conditions will be more unsettled in the North, with strong winds and rain at times.

People punting along the River Cam in Cambridge last month. Pic: PA
Image:
People punting along the River Cam in Cambridge last month. Pic: PA

In its forecast the Met Office said Friday will be a brighter day for many, with sunny spells across southern and central areas and highs of 25-26C expected. Northern Scotland will be breezy with showery outbreaks of rain.

Saturday will also see sunny spells for much of England and Wales, but there will be some rain in northern areas, paritcularly northern Scotland.

People enjoying the hot weather on Sunny Sands beach in Folkestone last month. Pic: PA
Image:
People enjoying the hot weather on Sunny Sands beach in Folkestone last month. Pic: PA

A weather front moving in from the west will bring rain to Northern Ireland, parts of Scotland and possibly northern England by Sunday evening, while central and southern areas are expected to remain dry with sunny spells.

Temperatures will begin to rise in the South from Sunday evening, as the remnants of Tropical Storm Dexter “draws warm air up from the southwest across the UK”, the Met Office said.

Temperatures are expected to exceed 30C across parts of central, southern and eastern England on Monday and Tuesday, the forecaster added.

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“We’re confident that temperatures will increase markedly by the start of next week, reaching the low 30s Celsius in parts of England on Monday and perhaps the mid 30s in a few places on Tuesday,” said Met Office deputy chief meteorologist Steven Keates.

“However, the length of this warm spell is still uncertain, and it is possible that high temperatures could persist further into next week, particularly in the south.”

“Ex-Dexter sets the wheels in motion for an uptick in temperatures, but the weather patterns then maintaining any hot weather are rather more uncertain”.

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Technology

Omada Health beats on revenue in first earnings report since IPO

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Omada Health beats on revenue in first earnings report since IPO

The Omada Health logo is displayed on a smartphone screen.

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Omada Health reported quarterly results for the first time since its IPO in June.

Here’s how the company did based on average analysts’ estimates compiled by LSEG:

  • Loss: Loss per share of 24 cents.
  • Revenue: $61 million vs. $55.2 million expected

The virtual care company’s revenue increased 49% in its second quarter from $41.21 million a year earlier. The company reported a net loss of $5.31 million, or a 24-cent loss per share, compared to a net loss of $10.69 million, or $1.40 loss per share, during the same period last year.

“We believe our Q2 performance reflects Omada’s ability to capture tailwinds in cardiometabolic care, to effectively commercialize our GLP-1 Care Track, and to leverage advances in artificial intelligence for the benefit of our members,” Omada CEO Sean Duffy said in a release.

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For its full year, Omada expects to report revenue between $235 million to $241 million, while analysts were expecting $222 million. The company said it expects to report an adjusted EBITDA loss of $9 million to $5 million for the full year, while analysts polled by FactSet expected a wider loss of $20.2 million.

Omada, founded in 2012, offers virtual care programs to support patients with chronic conditions like prediabetes, diabetes and hypertension. The company describes its approach as a “between-visit care model” that is complementary to the broader health-care ecosystem.

The stock opened at $23 in its debut on the Nasdaq in June. At market close on Thursday, shares closed at $19.46.

Omada said it finished its second quarter with 752,000 total members, up 52% year over year.

The company will discuss the results during its quarterly call with investors at 4:30 p.m. ET.

WATCH: Omada Health CEO Sean Duffy on IPO debut: Today is the right moment for us

Omada Health CEO Sean Duffy on IPO debut: Today is the right moment for us

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