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Meta researcher warned executives of child exploitation crisis on platforms

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Meta researcher warned executives of child exploitation crisis on platforms

A researcher for Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, warned executives at the tech giant that there may be upward of 500,000 cases of sexual exploitation of minors per day on the social media platforms.

Meta will be in court Monday as opening arguments begin in a case brought by New Mexico Attorney General Raul Torrez against the social media company, which he has accused of exposing children to “sexual exploitation and mental health harm” through interactions on the platform.

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In a court filing obtained by FOX Business, attorneys for the state of New Mexico noted that Malia Andrus, who worked in child safety roles at Meta from 2017 to 2024, said in an internal email included in court filings that sexually inappropriate messages were sent to “~500k victims per DAY in English markets only.” 

“We expect the true situation is worse,” Andrus added in an email from June 2020 included in the court records. The emails were first reported by the New York Post.

META FOUNDER MARK ZUCKERBERG MAY TESTIFY IN LANDMARK TRIAL TO EXAMINE IF SOCIAL MEDIA IS ADDICTIVE FOR KIDS

A sign outside of Meta headquarters

Signage outside Meta headquarters in Menlo Park, California, US, on Thursday, April 20, 2023. Meta Platforms Inc. is set to start cutting jobs across the company as it restructures teams and works toward founder Mark Zuckerbergs goal of greater effic (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Andrus said that the large number of users on the Facebook and Instagram platforms give predators the ability to target children to an extent that wasn’t possible prior to the advent of social media.

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“I just think, nowhere in the history of humanity could you have a secret conversation with 1000 people,” Andrus wrote. “I’m actually scared of the ramifications here.”

She also noted issues with age verification on the platform, writing in an email that it’s a “chicken and egg problem: our proactive detection and metrics use age-gating, so if the age prediction is wrong, we don’t find them. However, our investigators have given feedback that almost every time they encounter an age liar on IG (in a child safety context) the age prediction is incorrect (aligns with the age they falsely claim to be.)”

FACEBOOK AND INSTAGRAM ALLOW PREDATORS TO ‘TRADE CHILD PORNOGRAPHY,’ ACCORDING TO LAWSUIT FILED BY NEW MEXICO

A smartphone showing Mark Zuckerberg’s image is held in front of a computer screen with the Meta logo.

A computer screen displays the Meta logo while a mobile phone in the foreground shows Meta founder Mark Zuckerberg in Ankara, Turkey, on Oct. 28, 2025. (Arda Kucukkaya/Anadolu via Getty Images)

“The number discussed in this 2020 email exchange does not refer to individual victims or incidents of child exploitation,” a Meta spokesperson told FOX Business. “The measurement technology we used at the time used an overly wide and cautious set of criteria, and as a result counted many benign interactions. This number significantly reduced after we refined and improved our measurement technology.”

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Meta’s spokesperson added, “Since 2020, we’ve introduced a range of new measures to help reduce potential grooming and inappropriate interactions with children – including preventing adults from starting private chats with teens they’re not connected to, and using improved behavioral signals to identify potentially suspicious actors and preventing them from finding and following teens.”

META SUED AFTER TEEN BOYS’ SUICIDES, FAMILIES CLAIM TECH GIANT IGNORED ‘SEXTORTION’ SCHEMES

The company said that it takes a “comprehensive approach to ensuring teens have age-appropriate experiences on Meta platforms. This includes, for example, using technology to estimate someone’s age based on their activity, allowing people to report accounts they think may be underage.” 

“If we think someone may be misrepresenting their age or they are trying to change their age in a way that will impact the protections we enable, providing the option to use facial age estimation technology from Yoti or providing an ID,” Meta added. “These steps help us provide teens with safer experiences online, like the automatic protections offered by Instagram Teen Accounts.”

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The New Mexico case is just one of those facing Meta, which is also facing a case in California state court that begins Monday regarding whether Instagram harmed a woman’s mental health, fueling her depression and suicidal health. 

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is expected to testify during the California trial, which the judge aims to conclude by the end of March.

Mark Zuckerberg and others

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg may testify in the California trial. (Shawn Thew/EPA/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The case was also brought against Alphabet’s Google, which is the parent company of YouTube.

Google spokesperson José Castañeda told FOX Business that the allegations against YouTube are “simply not true.” 

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“Providing young people with a safer, healthier experience has always been core to our work,” he said.

Other social media platforms, including TikTok and Snap, were originally part of the suit, though they settled with the plaintiff before the trial.

Lawyers for the woman who brought the suit, a 20-year-old identified as K.G.M., aim to show that the social media companies were negligent in designing the apps and failed to warn the public about the risk. The jury may consider awarding her damages for pain and suffering and could also impose punitive damages.

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The companies plan to point to other factors in the young woman’s life as driving her mental health issues, while also outlining their work to protect young people on the platform and distancing themselves from users who upload harmful content.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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Exclusive | Exxon Mobil Plans to Redomicile in Texas, Moving Legal Home From New Jersey

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Exclusive | Exxon Mobil Plans to Redomicile in Texas, Moving Legal Home From New Jersey

Exxon Mobil XOM 2.23%increase; green up pointing triangle plans to move its legal home to Texas from New Jersey, joining other companies that have flocked to the Lone Star state in search of a more business-friendly environment. 

Exxon, which has been incorporated in New Jersey since 1882, plans to ask its shareholders to vote on a proposal to redomicile in Texas. If successful, Exxon will follow Tesla, Coinbase Global COIN 0.35%increase; green up pointing triangle and others that have reincorporated in Texas.

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Food prices could rise due to fertilizer shortages

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Food prices could rise due to fertilizer shortages
Here's why the Strait of Hormuz standoff could mean smaller harvests and higher grocery bills

The war in Iran could raise global food prices as the conflict disrupts fertilizer shipments through one of the world’s most critical trade routes.

While energy markets have focused on oil supply risks, analysts say threats to fertilizer supply chains through the Straight of Hormuz may also bring long-term economic issues through food inflation.

“Beyond energy, another risk receiving less attention is the potential knock-on effect on food prices, as fertilizer shortages push agricultural costs higher,” said Wolfe Research chief economist Stephanie Roth in a note written on Tuesday.

Roth estimates the disruption could raise “food-at-home” inflation by roughly 2 percentage points, adding about 0.15 percentage points to headline inflation in the U.S., on top of roughly 0.40 percentage point increase from energy.

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Those potential price hikes come as U.S. consumers face a sustained stretch of higher prices for food, housing and energy. Inflation for food at home climbed 2.4% year over year in February, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Wednesday.

Customers shop at Walmart on January 22, 2026 in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Will Newton | Getty Images

More than one-third of globally traded fertilizer passes through the Straight of Hormuz, making it a critical artery for agricultural supply chains. Commercial traffic through the route has largely been halted since the war started late last month, disrupting shipments just as farmers across the Northern Hemisphere prepare fields for spring planting.

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The timing is critical because fertilizers are applied early in the crop cycle and help determine yields later in the year.

“If fertilizer supply tightens during this window, farmers may reduce application rates,” Roth said in the note. That could reduce yields for crops like corn, soybeans, wheat and rice and increase agricultural costs.

Economists in the fertilizer industry are equally concerned and say prices are already rising.

Between the weeks ending Feb. 27 and March 6 — which encompass the start of the war — the price per short ton of urea fertilizer imports in the U.S. jumped by 30%, according to data collected by industry advocacy group The Fertilizer Institute.

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Urea — a nitrogen-based fertilizer widely used to boost crop yields — is one of the most heavily traded fertilizers moving through the region.

Higher fertilizer prices for farmers and retailers could ultimately raise food costs for consumers if the trade disruption lasts, said Veronica Nigh, chief economist at The Fertilizer Institute.

“This is a global impact on fertilizer costs,” said Nigh. “I would imagine that there would be much more passing on of these costs to consumers in this scenario, which is not something we have seen before.”

The U.S. relies on global fertilizer markets, importing roughly 20% of its total use, though nitrogen fertilizers like urea come from a more wide-ranging group of suppliers including Canada, Trinidad and Tobago, Russia and elsewhere.

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The ripple effect could stretch around the world and beyond commodities. Asia and Africa are especially dependent on fertilizer exports from the Gulf region. Countries such as India rely heavily on Gulf supplies, while several African economies depend on imported materials used to produce fertilizers.

While disruptions to fertilizer shipments could lower crop yields for farmers and raise costs for households, fertilizer producers could stand to benefit.

CF Industries hit an all-time high Monday and shares are up nearly 10% over the past week, their biggest multi-day gain since 2022.

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Hershey introduces Dot’s original snack mix

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Hershey introduces Dot’s original snack mix

Features a blend of Dot’s Original snack pieces.

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Medtronic plc (MDT) Presents at Leerink Global Healthcare Conference 2026 Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Medtronic plc (MDT) Leerink Global Healthcare Conference 2026 March 11, 2026 9:20 AM EDT

Company Participants

Thierry Pieton – Executive VP & CFO

Conference Call Participants

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Michael Kratky – Leerink Partners LLC, Research Division

Presentation

Michael Kratky
Leerink Partners LLC, Research Division

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All right. I think we can kick things off. But thank you all for joining. My name is Mike Kratky. I’m our Senior MedTech Analyst at Leerink and thrilled to be joined today by Medtronic’s CFO, Thierry Pieton. So thanks so much for joining.

Thierry Pieton
Executive VP & CFO

Yes. Thanks for having me.

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Question-and-Answer Session

Michael Kratky
Leerink Partners LLC, Research Division

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You just passed the 1-year mark at Medtronic. We’d love to maybe kick it off by hearing from your perspective, how the business has evolved over the last year. And as you look out over the next 12 months, what gets you most excited?

Thierry Pieton
Executive VP & CFO

Yes. Look, first of all, it’s been an interesting 12 months. I mean we’ve had a lot of things going on between sort of accelerating some of the new product launches and some of the portfolio actions that we’ve taken that I’m sure we’ll talk about, the IPO of MiniMed and we’re going back on offense in M&A, and we’ve done a couple of things in the last 3 or 4 months. So it’s been pretty busy. Look, I think the business has growing confidence.

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I think a lot of the work that has been done for several years in the past few years to build the portfolio and to reinforce some of the operating mechanisms in the team and to work on R&D on some of the innovations that we’re launching now, it’s starting to pay off. And I think there’s a lot of excitement

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More support as heating oil costs 'double'

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More support as heating oil costs 'double'

Rural farmers and homeowners are struggling to afford heating oil as prices rise.

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Outlook For Global Economy As Middle East Conflict Creates A Critical 'Chokepoint'

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Outlook For Global Economy As Middle East Conflict Creates A Critical 'Chokepoint'

Outlook For Global Economy As Middle East Conflict Creates A Critical 'Chokepoint'

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Paro expands South Asian-inspired portfolio

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Paro expands South Asian-inspired portfolio

Company adds lentil crisps to expand its lentil-focused product line. 

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Apura Ingredients, New Tree Fruit Co. form partnership

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Apura Ingredients, New Tree Fruit Co. form partnership

Partnership integrating NewTree’s “de-sugared” fruit technology into Apura’s portfolio. 

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Rambus SVP, general counsel Shinn sells $404k in stock

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Rambus SVP, general counsel Shinn sells $404k in stock

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Geox FY2025 presentation: net loss halved despite 8% sales decline

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Geox FY2025 presentation: net loss halved despite 8% sales decline


Geox FY2025 presentation: net loss halved despite 8% sales decline

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