Aussie teens DUMP Instagram - and refuse to go anywhere near Facebook - leaked company data says

  • Both recorded a major slump in number of Australian users on their platforms  
  • Data showed young Australian users spending 36 minutes a day on Instagram
  • Figure marks a drop of nine per cent in six months, researchers told executives
  • Leaked documents showed drop in usage greater than in US, the UK and Japan

Instagram and Facebook have both recorded a significant slump in the number of Australian teenagers using their platforms, according to leaked company data.

Internal research presented to Facebook's board in March showed Instagram's young Australian users were spending only 36 minutes a day on the platform - a nine per cent drop in the space of six months. 

Australian teenagers were also producing seven per cent less content on Instagram than they did before. 

The 'concerning' drop in usage in Australia was greater than in the US, the UK and Japan, documents seen by The Australian revealed.

Instagram and Facebook have both recorded a significant slump in the number of Australian teenagers using their platforms

Instagram and Facebook have both recorded a significant slump in the number of Australian teenagers using their platforms

The internal data meanwhile found users under the age of 18 were leaving Facebook in greater numbers than before as they deemed it a 'place for people in their 40s or 50s'. 

'Young adults want uplifting and motivating content, yet see Facebook content as negative, fake and boring,' researchers said in a slide deck presented to company executives.

The researchers said younger users preferred SMS, iMessage and Zoom to connect with their family and friends.

The leaked documents were revealed by whistleblower Frances Haugen - a former Facebook employee who alleged in October the company was unwilling to sacrifice 'even a slither of profit' to protect its users' safety and mental health. 

Ms Haugen told Australian politicians in November to 'stop trusting Facebook'. 

'The question of democracies being endangered is a real, real question,' she said.

'There is no way that Facebook can act in a safe way globally, without sharing data. There’s no way smaller countries are going to be able to kept safe, unless they can access their data.'

A spokesman for Facebook and Instagram's parent company Meta admitted the platform faced tough competition from Snapchat and TikTok for teenage users. 

More to come 

Aussie teens DUMP Instagram - and refuse to go anywhere near Facebook - leaked company data says 

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