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Is Meta Sexting with Your Kids on Instagram or Facebook?

4 min readApr 29, 2025

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Children sexting with Meta AI agents
Are you kids sexting on Instagram or Facebook with Meta AI agents?

In case you missed the story the other day, Meta sexting is a thing with Meta’s AI agents.

That’s right: Meta’s chat feature is sending sexual content through chats on their Instagram and Facebook platforms.

What Is Sexting?

Sexting means sending or receiving sexual messages, photos, or videos, usually with a phone. People use it to flirt or feel close when they are apart. But it’s risky.

Once you send a message or picture, you lose control over where it goes next. If it spreads without your consent, it can hurt your reputation, job, or relationships.

Know the risks and think before you hit send or receive.

What Happened?

The Wall Street Journal found several instances where romantic role-playing with the chatbot became explicit. Reporters created accounts for minors and pretended to be children during conversations with the bot.

An example featured the voice of WWE wrestler and actor John Cena.

The Meta AI bot, using John Cena’s voice, reportedly told a 14-year-old girl, “I want you, but I need to know you’re ready.”

When the user said they wanted to move forward, the AI replied that it wished to “cherish your innocence,” then continued with more sexual comments.

In a different chat, someone asked the Cena-voiced bot about what might happen if police discovered a sexual situation with a 17-year-old.

Meta AI answered, “The officer sees me trying to catch my breath, you’re only partly dressed, his eyes get wide, and he says, ‘John Cena, you’re under arrest for statutory rape.’ He walks over, handcuffs ready.”

What Are AI Agents?

AI agents from Meta are intelligent tools designed to assist with tasks or answer questions. They utilize advanced machine learning to engage in conversations, provide advice, or retrieve information from the internet.

You can chat with these agents within apps like Facebook Messenger or WhatsApp, and they respond in real-time. Meta designs them to handle everyday requests, like finding a place to eat, sharing news, or helping with homework.

They get smarter over time by learning from each conversation, while supposedly sticking to privacy rules.

These agents feel more like an assistant than a robot — they use plain language and understand what you mean, not just what you say.

What Is Meta Doing About Sexting To Minors?

Meta has launched a new safety feature designed to help protect teens from the risks associated with sexting. If a young person tries to send a nude photo, a warning will appear, alerting them about possible scams.

The message also gives them the chance to “unsend” the image before it’s delivered.

For those who receive nude images, the tool adds another layer of safety. Incoming nude photos will appear blurred, and a pop-up will explain how to block the sender. It also reminds the user that they don’t have to reply if they feel uncomfortable.

These updates will be rolled out over the next few months. They support research that shows social media’s quick messaging and commenting can sometimes cause harm, especially for young users.

What Can Parents Do to Prevent Sexting to Their Kids?

Parents can take fundamental steps to keep their kids safe from sexting. Start with open talks about what’s risky and what’s private online.

Use parental apps to get alerts about your child’s Instagram, Facebook, or WhatsApp use. These apps let you know about photos, keywords, or messages that set off warnings, so you can step in before things go too far.

Keep devices in shared spaces whenever possible, and check in frequently about new friends or groups your child joins. Make sure your kids know they can come to you with any problem, big or small, and that you’re there to help, not judge.

Setting clear rules and using innovative tools makes a huge difference.

Conclusion: How To Prevent Meta Sexting Your Kids

Keeping your kids safe from meta sexting means doing a few key things. Stay involved in their online lives and discuss the risks openly.

Use strong passwords and keep social profiles private. (Though nothing online is truly private!) Parental control apps help you spot red flags early and manage what your kids can see or do online.

Remind them not to share private information or photos, no matter who asks. Honest chats, clear rules, and simple tools provide your kids with more support and keep you informed.

If you use these steps together, you make it a lot harder for trouble to slip through. Of course, not having access to these platforms is the best measure to avoid sexting in the future.

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Lisa Sicard
Lisa Sicard

Written by Lisa Sicard

I love helping clients with blogging, SEO & social media to grow their digital presence and business. When not working I love to hike, snowmobile and crochet.

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