MetaCEOMark Zuckerbergpushed back against the notion that the social media company made increasing time spent on Instagram a company goal.

Zuckerberg was addressing a 2015 email thread in which he appeared to highlight improving engagement metrics as an urgent matter for the company.

While the email chain may have contained the words "company goals," Zuckerberg said the comments could have been an aspiration, and asserted that Meta doesn't have those objectives.

Lawyers later brought up evidence from Instagram chiefAdam Mosseri, which included goals to actively up user daily engagement time on the platform to 40 minutes in 2023 to 46 minutes in 2026.

Zuckerberg said the company uses milestones internally to measure against competitors and "deliver the results we want to see." He asserted that the company is building services to help people connect.

The comments came during testimony in a landmark trial aboutsocial mediaand safety that's being likened to the industry's "Big Tobacco" moment.

The trial, which began in late January, centers on a young woman who alleged that she became addicted to social media and video streaming apps likeInstagramandYouTube.

Lawyers also raised questions over whether the company has taken adequate steps to remove underage users from its platform.

Zuckerberg said during his testimony that some users lie about their age when signing up for Instagram, which requires users to be 13 or older. Lawyers also shared a document which stated that 4 million kids under 13 used the platform in the U.S.

The Facebook founder said that the company removes all underage users it identifies and includes terms about age usage during the sign-up process.

Source: Drudge Report