<p>Meta-owned Instagram is working on a feature to protect users from receiving nude and explicit content in their direct messages (DMs) from unknown people.</p>.<p>An app developer Alessandro Paluzzi first tweeted screenshots of the feature.</p>.<p>"Instagram is working on nudity protection for chats. Technology on your device covers photos that may contain nudity in chats. Instagram can't access photos," he posted.</p>.<p>Meta confirmed to <em>The Verge </em>that such a feature is in the development to protect Instagram users' privacy.</p>.<p>"We're working closely with experts to ensure these new features preserve people's privacy, while giving them control over the messages they receive," a company spokesperson was quoted as saying.</p>.<p>Meta said that the technology will not allow it to view the actual messages, nor share them with third parties.</p>.<p>The move comes at a time when a UK-based non-profit Center for Countering Digital Hate found that Instagram's tools failed to act upon 90 per cent of image-based abusive direct messages "sent to high-profile women".</p>.<p>Last year, in a bid to give young users a safer, private experience on its platform, Instagram made it hard for potentially suspicious accounts to find young people by making the accounts of users under 16 private by default.</p>.<p>It also limited advertisers' options to reach young people.</p>.<p>The company has developed new technology that finds accounts that have shown potentially suspicious behaviour and stops those accounts from interacting with young people's accounts.</p>
<p>Meta-owned Instagram is working on a feature to protect users from receiving nude and explicit content in their direct messages (DMs) from unknown people.</p>.<p>An app developer Alessandro Paluzzi first tweeted screenshots of the feature.</p>.<p>"Instagram is working on nudity protection for chats. Technology on your device covers photos that may contain nudity in chats. Instagram can't access photos," he posted.</p>.<p>Meta confirmed to <em>The Verge </em>that such a feature is in the development to protect Instagram users' privacy.</p>.<p>"We're working closely with experts to ensure these new features preserve people's privacy, while giving them control over the messages they receive," a company spokesperson was quoted as saying.</p>.<p>Meta said that the technology will not allow it to view the actual messages, nor share them with third parties.</p>.<p>The move comes at a time when a UK-based non-profit Center for Countering Digital Hate found that Instagram's tools failed to act upon 90 per cent of image-based abusive direct messages "sent to high-profile women".</p>.<p>Last year, in a bid to give young users a safer, private experience on its platform, Instagram made it hard for potentially suspicious accounts to find young people by making the accounts of users under 16 private by default.</p>.<p>It also limited advertisers' options to reach young people.</p>.<p>The company has developed new technology that finds accounts that have shown potentially suspicious behaviour and stops those accounts from interacting with young people's accounts.</p>