In 2018, as Fb sought to increase its world footprint, the corporate thought of launching a separate app for teenagers referred to as Bell, which might have been constructed round their excessive colleges, providing boards the place college students might focus on sports activities groups, college occasions or what they overheard within the hallway, a brand new court docket submitting exhibits.
The corporate supposed for Bell to develop into a central hub for teenagers inside excessive colleges throughout america and ultimately the world over, the place they might talk with their classmates however not anybody exterior their college. The technique was to attract teenagers into the corporate’s ecosystem after which transfer them onto the common Fb platform as soon as they graduated, in accordance with {a partially} redacted April 2018 inner presentation, which was filed in federal court docket final week.
“Excessive Faculty communication is vital to teenagers and vital for us to win,” the presentation acknowledged.
Though the Bell app by no means launched, the interior plans show the significance that Fb had positioned on “successful” customers earlier than they turned 18, laying groundwork to maintain them on the merchandise over the long run.
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A spokesperson for Meta, Fb’s mum or dad firm, mentioned the app was developed as an early exploratory thought, and it will have relied closely on Fb moderation groups to police the content material. The spokesperson didn’t reply to a query about why the app by no means launched.
Plans for Bell had been included amongst a big batch of reveals filed late Friday by the plaintiffs as a part of a sprawling lawsuit in opposition to the biggest social media firms, together with Meta. A whole lot of particular person households, college districts and 33 state attorneys normal accuse Meta, Google, ByteDance and Snap of designing addictive social media merchandise and selling them to minors, regardless of realizing about analysis exhibiting hurt to kids’s psychological well being.
“The social media habit trials are offering a glance backstage and are proving that the established order was even worse than we imagined,” mentioned Sacha Haworth, govt director of the Tech Oversight Challenge, a nonprofit advocacy group pushing for extra regulation of digital expertise firms. “We merely need to do extra to guard children.”
Meta and the opposite firms have broadly argued that there is no such thing as a conclusively established hyperlink between social media use and psychological well being issues, and the platforms didn’t have an obligation to warn the general public about potential risks.
“We strongly disagree with these allegations and are assured the proof will present our longstanding dedication to supporting younger individuals,” Meta mentioned in an announcement. “For over a decade, we’ve listened to oldsters, labored with specialists and regulation enforcement, and performed in-depth analysis to know the problems that matter most.”
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg argued final week in a Los Angeles courtroom that folks keep on the corporate’s platforms as a result of they discover them useful in speaking with friends. Meta has developed higher age detection methods over time, the corporate says, in an try to cease kids beneath 13 from accessing its platforms.
A Meta spokesperson pointed to options on its new Teen Accounts which are supposed to present dad and mom extra management over their kids’s social media use, and encourage younger customers to take breaks and pause notifications in a single day.
Meta has thought of launching platforms aimed toward kids over the previous decade. It paused plans to create a model of Instagram for youngsters beneath age 13 in 2021 following pushback from mum or dad security teams. It additionally thought of constructing a model of Fb for youngsters in 2017, however determined in opposition to it after dad and mom reportedly supplied destructive suggestions.

Fb’s 2018 presentation on Bell exhibits how teen customers would have been capable of message anybody of their college, set up occasions on the platform and create class or club-based group chats just like the apps Discord and Slack. College students additionally would have been capable of publish nameless confessions, just like the app YikYak, and Bell would have built-in with schooling expertise merchandise, corresponding to Google Classroom.
As soon as teenagers graduated from highschool, in accordance with the interior presentation, Bell would have supplied “a clean on-ramp” for them to import their info to Fb. The information that Bell collected on college students would later affect what confirmed up of their Fb feeds.
The inner presentation cited surveys of highschool college students who recognized their “prerequisites” in a social media app: speaking with classmates, watching movies and memes created by college students and staying within the loop on happenings at their highschool. A few of this already occurred on Fb Teams and Messenger, and on Snapchat, however the firm noticed a gap to create a single app that “gathers everybody in school into one closed campus.”
The corporate hoped that the Bell app would attain 80% of U.S. excessive colleges by the tip of 2020 and increase to Australia, Canada and European nations.
Late final yr, Australia enacted a ban on kids beneath 16 from utilizing social media.

