How the Facebook babies became the TikTok teens

As Facebook turns 20, the babies who once pervaded its news feed barely use the platform now.
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Updated 02 February 2024
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How the Facebook babies became the TikTok teens

  • As Facebook turns 20, so are many of the toddlers who pervaded its news feed

DUBAI: “My parents like photography and when the digital age came, they shifted from photobooks to Facebook,” 23-year-old Dubai resident Alexandra Morata told Arab News.

Morata, like many her age and younger, grew up to find out that their parents had been posting pictures of them — including of their awkward teenage years — on Facebook.

The phenomenon was so common that there is a term for it: sharenting.

A paper written by child development experts defines sharenting as “the practice of parents, caregivers or relatives sharing information about their children (underage) online, typically on some online platforms.”

A massive 80 percent of children had an online presence before they were 2 years old, according to a 2010 study by online security firm AVG.

The presence of baby pictures on the news feed was seemingly so pervasive that in 2013 a browser extension called UnBaby.me was created to auto-detect baby images and replace them with others, including of cats.

As Facebook turns 20, the babies who once pervaded its news feed barely use the platform now.

Teenagers spent nearly two hours on TikTok every day, compared to just one minute on Facebook and 16 minutes on Instagram, according to a 2022 study.

Morata and Aily Prasetyo, 24, both said they have shifted to other platforms like Instagram and TikTok partly due to their friends not being on Facebook anymore, and also because “Facebook was so populated with … old people,” said Prasetyo.

“Facebook is a platform for millennials and baby boomers while TikTok is more for a younger audience and is known for its emphasis on authentic videos rather than ones that are overly sales oriented,” Nimrah Khan, founder of digital marketing agency Kollab Digital, told Arab News.

Those considered Generation Z are overwhelmingly embracing TikTok. It was the top platform of choice for Gen Zs overtaking YouTube, Instagram and Snapchat, according to a study last year by research firm YPulse.

Globally, seven of the top 10 countries for TikTok, by reach, are in the Middle East North Africa region, according to “Social Media in the Middle East 2022: A Year in Review” published by the University of Oregon-UNESCO Crossings Institute.

TikTok even overtook online giant Google in 2021 as the most popular website of the year, according to internet security company Cloudflare.

Khan has a warning though: “TikTok’s algorithmic recommendations can expose users, including teenagers, to inappropriate content or potential privacy risks based on their browsing history and interactions on the platform.”

Still, many youngsters remain open to sharing their lives online because they, in large part, understand the security risks of living a digital life.

Morata, for example, said that she does not have any privacy concerns around the pictures her parents shared of her childhood because they had private profiles. The conversations around online safety have made her more aware of the risks, and so, she is careful with her accounts, she added.

Social media “can be detrimental to mental health,” but it has become such a common topic of conversation that most older teens are aware of what is fake and what is not, especially as influencers have started becoming more authentic, said Prasetyo.

Despite that awareness, social media platforms can have dangerous effects on youngsters’ mental health.

Cam Barrett, who is now in her early twenties had her personal life — from bath photos to the fact that she was adopted — shared publicly on Facebook by her mother. It is a habit she inculcated too, sharing much of her life publicly, when she opened a Twitter account, she told The Atlantic.

But last year, Barrett was among the people who advocated for children’s internet privacy.

“Today is the first time that I’ve introduced myself with my legal name in three years because I’m terrified to share my name because the digital footprint I had no control over ... exists,” she said testifying in front of the Washington State House last year.

The testimony was to support a bill that aims to ensure that children who are heavily featured in influencers’ online content have a right to financial compensation for their work and to maintain their privacy.

“I know firsthand what it’s like to not have a choice in the digital footprint you didn’t create that follows you around for the rest of your life with no option for it to be removed,” Barrett said.

The bill is the brainchild of Chris McCarty, a student at the University of Washington, who was inspired by the 2020 case of Huxley Stauffer, a toddler with special needs adopted from China by family vloggers Myka and James Stauffer.

The couple made and monetized extensive content about Huxley and his adoption, before giving him up because they realized they were not equipped to take care of him.

In 2021, whistleblower and former product manager at Facebook, Frances Haugen, leaked thousands of internal documents detailing how the company knew its apps helped spread divisive content and harmed the mental health of some young users.

Top bosses from all major social media companies have been called on for answers by lawmakers around the world.

On Wednesday this week, CEOs from Meta, TikTok, and other companies were grilled by US lawmakers over the dangers that children and teens face using social media platforms.

“They’re responsible for many of the dangers our children face online,” said US Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin, and chair of the committee, during his opening remarks.

He added: “Their design choices, their failures to adequately invest in trust and safety, their constant pursuit of engagement and profit over basic safety have all put our kids and grandkids at risk.”

The hearing marked TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew’s second appearance before the US Congress, since March 2023, when he was questioned about the growing influence of TikTok on young people’s mental health, among other concerns.

 


Police disperse pro-Palestinian staff protests at Microsoft HQ in Washington

Updated 20 August 2025
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Police disperse pro-Palestinian staff protests at Microsoft HQ in Washington

  • No Azure for Apartheid group occupied Microsoft’s East Campus in Redmond, demanding the company end its ties with Israel.
  • Microsoft is accused of complicity in war crimes in Gaza and the West Bank

WASHINGTON: Police dismantled a protest encampment set up by current and former Microsoft employees at the tech giant’s headquarters in Redmond, Washington, over the company’s cloud services being used by the Israeli military for surveillance operations against Palestinians.

Members of the worker-led campaign group, No Azure for Apartheid, occupied Microsoft’s East Campus in Redmond on Tuesday, demanding the company end its ties with Israel. The group accused Microsoft of complicity in war crimes in Gaza and the West Bank through its support of Israeli military and intelligence operations.

“In establishing the Liberated Zone, we are liberating our workplace and reclaiming our labor by refusing to do any work that could contribute to genocide and other crimes against humanity in Palestine,” said Microsoft worker Julius Shan in a letter to the company on Tuesday.

“We choose to take this step to escalate against Microsoft’s active role in powering 22 months of genocide in Palestine,” he added.

Microsoft workers occupy HQ in protest against company’s ties to Israeli military. (Supplied)

The protests follow a recent investigation by The Guardian with the Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine and Hebrew-language outlet Local Call, which revealed that Microsoft’s Azure cloud services were being used by Israeli authorities to facilitate mass surveillance of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank. The system reportedly enabled the storage of millions of daily mobile phone call recordings made by Palestinians and assisted in identifying bombing targets in Gaza.

On Friday, Microsoft said it launched an “urgent” external inquiry into the allegations as executives denied their knowledge of the nature of Israel’s use of Azure technology. In a statement, Microsoft said “using Azure for the storage of data files of phone calls obtained through broad or mass surveillance of civilians in Gaza and the West Bank” would be prohibited by its terms of service.

Responding to the announcement, the “No Azure for Apartheid” group described the inquiry as “yet another tactic to delay” meeting its demands.

The group demanded that Microsoft ends sales, deals and services to all Israeli entities, call for a ceasefire and an end to the starvation in Gaza, pay reparations to the Palestinians, and end discrimination against pro-Palestinian workers.

Hossam Nasr, one of the group’s organizers, told Arab News that Tuesday’s encampment aimed to be reminiscent of the US student-led protests at prominent universities last year. However, police officers interrupted the protests after two hours, saying the demonstrators trespassed private property and therefore were subject to arrest.

In a statement to Arab News, a Microsoft spokesperson said: “The group was asked to leave, and they left.”

The demonstrators moved to a nearby public sidewalk as police officers and Microsoft security dismantled the encampment activities.

In the company’s plaza, demonstrators paid artistic tributes to the Palestinian victims in Gaza and held placards that read “Join The Worker Intifada – No Labor for Genocide” targeted at Microsoft. They set up tents and a negotiation table with a large banner that read “Microsoft Execs, Come to the Table.”

The space was also filled with shrouds symbolizing the dead in Gaza, and a large plate reading, “Stop Starving Gaza.”

Police dismantled protest encampment set up by current and former Microsoft employees over the company’s ties to Israeli military. (Supplied)

The protests come amid growing pressure on the US tech giant from Microsoft employees and investors over its ties to the Israeli military and the role its technologies have played in the 22-month war on Gaza.

Earlier in April during Microsoft’s 50th anniversary celebration, an employee interrupted a panel between CEO Satya Nadella, former CEO Steve Ballmer and founder Bill Gates. Another disrupted an address from AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman. Both employees were fired.

Nasr, and another organizer, Abdo Mohamed, told Arab News they were terminated for organizing what the tech giant called an “unauthorized” vigil at Microsoft’s Redmond headquarters for Palestinians killed during the war in Gaza.

In response to the mounting criticism, Microsoft launched a investigation earlier this year. In May, the company said it had “found no evidence to date” the Israeli military had failed to comply with its terms of service or used Azure “to target or harm people” in Gaza. 

It said it provides Israel’s Ministry of Defense with software, professional services, Azure cloud services, and Azure AI services such as language translation, as well as cybersecurity support, but denied these technologies are used to target civilians. However, the company acknowledged its limited visibility into how its technology is deployed on private or on-premises systems.


Gaza journalist Motaz Azaiza reunites with Nada Jwaifel, survivor from iconic photo

Updated 20 August 2025
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Gaza journalist Motaz Azaiza reunites with Nada Jwaifel, survivor from iconic photo

  • Israel airstrike had severely injured Jwaifel, killed 7 siblings and grandmother
  • Jwaifel, 19, blasts Tel Aviv for taking ‘everything precious,’ but ‘never break my spirit’

LONDON: Almost two years after capturing the iconic image of Nada Jwaifel that became one of Time magazine’s Top 10 photos of 2023, Palestinian journalist Motaz Azaiza has reunited with the young woman who was pulled from the rubble of an Israeli airstrike in Gaza.

Azaiza met Jwaifel, 19, this week in Washington D.C., where she is receiving medical treatment.

The photo, which showed her trapped under the rubble of her destroyed home at Al-Nuseirat refugee camp, helped spark the global outpouring of support and mobilize the urgent medical intervention that saved her life.

Azaiza had been documenting the work of Gaza’s Civil Defense teams in late October 2023 when he found Jwaifel buried beneath the remains of an eight-story building flattened by an Israeli airstrike. Seven of her siblings and her grandmother were killed in the attack.

“It was the light from my camera flash that discovered her,” Azaiza said in an earlier Instagram post.

 

 

Jwaifel was critically injured, with her legs pinned under concrete. Doctors had warned that immediate amputation would be necessary unless urgent treatment was secured.

When the photo gained global attention, the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund quickly launched efforts to evacuate her for treatment abroad.

Following 75 surgeries across four countries, Jwaifel eventually underwent a complex 16-hour nerve and muscle transplant at Johns Hopkins Hospital in the US that saved her legs from amputation.

“It’s painful to be in her place. It’s painful to see her,” Azaiza said in a previous interview with Time magazine.

“She’s so lucky she survived. What about people who, there was no hole for me to see them and they (were) still stuck under the rubble and they passed with no help.”

Now able to walk again, Jwaifel joined Azaiza at a PCRF event in Washington, where she spoke of her journey.

“Israel might have taken everything precious to me — my family, my home, my peace — but it will never never break my spirit, as long as I can breathe.”


Saudi academy launches media training program in Switzerland

Updated 19 August 2025
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Saudi academy launches media training program in Switzerland

  • Held in collaboration with EHL Hospitality Business School, the launch included the signing of a MOU between the academy and EHL
  • Agreement aims to foster international collaboration and cultural exchange, supporting the ministry’s goal of empowering national media talent

RIYADH: The Saudi Media Academy of the Ministry of Media launched the first phase of its Media Leaders Track in Switzerland through an intensive global event management training program.

Held in collaboration with EHL Hospitality Business School, the launch included the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the academy and EHL.

The ceremony was attended by the assistant minister of media and chairman of the academy’s board, Abdullah Al-Maghlouth, along with other officials, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Tuesday.

The agreement aims to foster international collaboration and cultural exchange, supporting the ministry’s goal of empowering national media talent. It was signed by the academy’s CEO, Khalid Zain Al-Abdeen, and EHL associate dean, Stephane Haddad.

The five-day training camp offers hands-on workshops led by international experts and site visits to world-class event institutions. It focuses on planning, organizing, and executing major events, team leadership, and audience engagement.

This is the first practical phase of a four-stage track, followed by a digital advertising course in Riyadh, an international media camp in Singapore, and a final advanced leadership communication course.

Targeting professionals and creatives across sectors, the program aims to enhance media presence, improve management of national events, and strengthen Saudi Arabia’s global representation.


D360 Bank signs strategic agreement with Thmanyah as banking partner for broadcasting Saudi Football League tournaments

Updated 18 August 2025
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D360 Bank signs strategic agreement with Thmanyah as banking partner for broadcasting Saudi Football League tournaments

RIYADH: D360 Bank, the Saudi Shariah-compliant digital bank, has announced its exclusive partnership with Thmanyah, part of the Saudi Research & Media Group (SRMG), for the landmark broadcast rights of the Kingdom’s most prestigious football tournaments.

This partnership positions D360 Bank as the exclusive financial player reshaping the sports broadcasting scene, securing a distinctive presence in the largest and most prominent regional sporting event. It delivers impactful access to a massive and highly engaged audience year-round, while strengthening the bank’s association with the finest Arabic content on the internet.

The agreement covers the Saudi Pro League (Roshn League), Saudi Super Cup, and First Division League (Yelo League), along with a broad range of sports-related Thmanyah content. 

Through this collaboration, D360 Bank is championing the future of sports entertainment by offering fans unprecedented control and insight into every match. 

Viewers will be able to simultaneously stream up to three games, access in-depth analytics and real-time insights, instantly rewind key moments, and enjoy crisp, high-definition streaming at 50 frames per second. 

Tiered viewing packages will ensure that every viewer is catered to, delivering a personalized and immersive football experience.

The partnership reflects D360 Bank’s strategy of aligning with homegrown innovators who share its commitment to community, culture, and progress. By investing in sports, the bank aims to extend its role beyond financial services to become a driver of shared experiences that bring people together.


Mother of missing journalist Austin Tice reveals newly declassified intelligence

Updated 16 August 2025
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Mother of missing journalist Austin Tice reveals newly declassified intelligence

  • Press conference marks 13 years since her son vanished outside Damascus

WASHINGTON: The mother of missing American journalist and former US Marine Austin Tice has shared new details from recently declassified intelligence documents, saying the files contain information that could help locate her son.

Speaking at a press conference marking 13 years since her son vanished outside Damascus, Debra Tice said the documents suggested that US agencies had near-daily information on his condition and captivity during the years following his disappearance in the Syrian Arab Republic.

The files were shared earlier this year by US Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard following long-standing requests from the family to access raw intelligence material related to the case.

“When he had something (wrong) about his teeth, they took him to a dentist. When he had some stomach issues, they took him to the doctor,” Debra Tice was quoted as saying in The Washington Post. She did not specify dates or locations.

Tice, a freelance journalist covering the Syrian conflict for The Washington Post and other US outlets, was abducted on the outskirts of Damascus in August 2012. A video released shortly after his disappearance showed him blindfolded and held by armed men. US officials have long suspected the Syrian government was behind his disappearance, but Damascus has consistently denied involvement.

Debra Tice said she was repeatedly told by officials in past administrations that no new information existed. But she said the files revealed otherwise, reinforcing her belief that her son is alive and can still be found.

She alleged that the Syrian government had attempted to return her son shortly after his disappearance by reaching out to then-US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

“The Syrian government reached out to Hillary Clinton and wanted her to come and get Austin in ... August of 2012, and she declined,” she said, reported The Washington Post.

However, the publication quoted former US officials with knowledge of the case denying such an offer was made, saying that the Syrian regime never acknowledged holding Tice and “vigorously denied any knowledge of Austin right to the end.”

US officials have blamed the lack of progress on obstruction by the Bashar Assad regime and the highly secretive nature of Syria’s detention network.

Since the collapse of the Assad regime in December 2024, the CIA has reportedly adopted a “low confidence” assessment that Tice is likely dead — an evaluation the family strongly rejects. Debra Tice said she remains confident her son is alive and that the release of thousands of detainees from collapsed Syrian prisons has yet to yield any definitive information about his case.

The Tice family’s access to intelligence files was granted following lobbying efforts. Debra Tice said the newly declassified information had strengthened her resolve to keep pressure on the US authorities to resolve the case.

“We know Austin is alive. We need to find him,” she said.

Tice’s case remains one of the longest unresolved abductions of an American journalist in the Middle East. Rights groups and press freedom advocates have repeatedly urged the US government to prioritize the search for him and ensure accountability for his captors.