Evan Spiegel, co-founder and CEO of Snap, addresses a Senate committee to outline Snapchat’s safety architecture and support for federal online safety legislation. Unlike traditional social media, Snapchat utilizes a private-by-default model, lacks public popularity metrics, and employs "delete-by-default" messaging to mimic the privacy of real-world conversations. To combat illegal activity, the platform uses a mix of human review and automated scanning, resulting in 690,000 reports to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and the removal of 2.2 million pieces of drug-related content last year. Spiegel advocates for the passage of the Kids Online Safety Act and the Cooper Davis Act, emphasizing that while no legislation is perfect, established "rules of the road" are essential. He acknowledges the platform's role in potential harms and commits to industry-wide collaboration and continuous improvement of parental controls and law enforcement partnerships.
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