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Thursday, September 11, 2025

Blackburn grills Zuckerberg over claims Meta ‘willfully’ pushed VR product harmful to kids

 Sen. Marsha Blackburn has demanded Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg respond to whistleblower accusations that the tech giant “willfully” and “intentionally” pushed virtual reality products that “they knew” were harmful to children.

Two former Meta employees testified to a Senate Judiciary subcommittee Tuesday that Meta suppressed their research about children being exposed to sexual content — including nudity, masturbation, and propositions for sexual activity — in the metaverse.

“If he [Zuckerberg] wants to refute what they [the whistleblowers] are saying, my door is open and I would welcome the opportunity to work with him on this issue,” Blackburn (R-Tenn.) told The Post in an interview Wednesday, adding: “The witnesses we had yesterday were very credible.”

Sen. Marsha Blackburn has emerged as one of the top voices in the Senate seeking to boost online safety measures for children.Getty Images
Mark Zuckerberg previously faced a firestorm over Facebook’s and Instagram’s impact on young girls and issued an apology to families during a hearing last year.AP

The ex-Meta workers, Jason Sattizahn and Cayce Savage, had been tasked with studying the impact of the company’s VR product on underage users, and charged that the tech giant was aware of the effect the platform was having on children.

“They had made copious notes as they worked on these issues; they were frustrated with the way that Meta knowingly, willfully, intentionally, continued to push a product that they knew was causing mental health harm to children,” Blackburn said. 

“All of this was known by Meta, but Meta chose to do nothing, and we’re going to continue to investigate this.”

A total of six whistleblowers have come forward with concerns about Meta’s handling of its VR program, including the two who testified this week. Sattizahn and Savage alleged that many children under the age of 13 use Meta’s VR and accused the company of taking minimal steps to rectify that.

Zuckerberg has invested heavily in virtual reality since his company acquired Oculus VR, which it later renamed Reality Labs, in 2014.

The company formerly known as Facebook even rebranded as Meta in a nod to the metaverse, a shared virtual reality space that the tech giant is developing. Since then, Meta has shifted its strategy toward artificial intelligence.

Meta has forcefully pushed back against the whistleblower allegations, claiming that the “accusations detailed in the hearing were based on selectively leaked internal documents that were picked specifically to craft a false narrative.”

The two whistleblowers unveiled their scathing accusations against Meta on Tuesday during a Senate subcommittee hearing.Getty Images

“The truth is there was never any blanket prohibition on conducting research with young people and, since the start of 2022, Meta approved nearly 180 Reality Labs-related studies on issues including youth safety and well-being,” a spokesperson told The Post.

The rep also argued that its engineers have built safety features into its devices and “made it clear those devices were meant for people over 13.”

“We have also introduced automatic protections for teens to limit unwanted contact, like default voice channel settings in Horizon Worlds, so individuals can hear or be heard only from people they know, as well as personal boundaries,” the spokesperson added.

Blackburn was unmoved by Meta’s defense and called for the Federal Trade Commission to look into the matter.

She also wants Congress to pass the Kids Online Safety and Privacy Act, a bill she has co-sponsored with Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), to set guidelines for how social media platforms interact with children.

“You’ve got a duty of care that it would require, and also the ability of parents to have a toolbox so that they can set certain parameters for their children, so that being in the virtual space is a healthy, not a harmful space,” she explained about how the law would address her concerns with Meta.

The “duty of care” provision requires internet platforms to take “reasonable care” in combating dangers to minors such as sexual abuse, bullying, violence and more.

Sen. Marsha Blackburn has championed the Kids Online Safety and Privacy Act.Getty Images

The Kids Online Safety and Privacy Act overwhelmingly passed the Senate last year, but was not voted on by the House.

Critics such as Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) have raised free speech concerns and argued that some of the bill’s language is too broad.

“I always find it so curious that they talk about free speech as being their concern,” Blackburn said of the bill’s critics. “In the physical world, we have laws on child endangerment. We have laws that would prohibit you from exposing a child to predators, pedophiles, sex traffickers, human traffickers, drug traffickers.”

“We have laws that say you cannot sell alcohol, you cannot sell tobacco, you cannot expose a child to pornography,” she added. “But when it comes to the virtual space, people want to act like you can’t have anything that would restrict exposure of these harms to a child. So this is not a free speech issue.”

Blackburn, who won a second term in the Senate last November and is now running for Tennessee governor next year, stressed that “parents are tired of this; kids are tired of this.”

https://nypost.com/2025/09/11/us-news/gop-sen-marsha-blackburn-dares-mark-zuckerberg-to-answer-claims-meta-willfully-pushed-vr-product-harmful-to-kids/

NYC MTA lost $1B to fare and toll evasion last year, watchdog analysis finds

 The MTA lost roughly $1 billion to fare and toll evasion in 2024 — much higher than the already astronomical sum estimated by the transit agency itself, according to a bombshell new watchdog study.

The perpetually cash-strapped Metropolitan Transportation Authority is also on track to lose $900 million this year from turnstile jumpers, bus fare scofflaws and toll dodgers, the Citizens Budget Commission’s analysis released Thursday found.

“We still need to ensure that all riders pay their fair share and frankly improving fare evasion improve the public’s confidence in the MTA and the system,” said CBC President Andrew Rein.

While arguably failing to contain the costly rampant problem, MTA officials this year alone have hit New Yorkers with a wallet-draining $9 congestion pricing toll to drive into lower Manhattan and are considering increasing subway and bus fares to $3.

And splashy MTA efforts to stop fare jumpers — from spikestall modern fare gateslocking emergency gatesprivate security guards and a $1 million study on the freeloaders’ psychology — have largely flopped.

Fare and toll evasion cost the MTA roughly $1 billion last year, a new study found.Christopher Sadowski
Tackling fare evasion is key to closing the MTA’s yawning $800 million structural operating budget gap, the study argues.

But the MTA, as it contends with an accounting nightmare, could also be underestimating the massive hit from fare and toll evasion.

The transit agency’s official estimates of fare evasion losses are often lower than the CBC’s, the nonprofit think tank’s study notes.

“The MTA’s estimate, often reported as $700 to $800 million, is lower because it assumes a larger share of individuals who evade the fare would not have paid anyway than CBC’s,” according to the study.

The MTA’s fare evasion counts don’t include riders who transit officials believe won’t pay, such as students with OMNY cards or young children who may ride for free, the study states.

The analysis found that last year the MTA lost $568 million in unpaid bus fares, $350 million in subway fares, at least $46 million in commuter rail tickets and at least $51 million in tolls.

The total $918 million loss was triple the $305 million that the MTA saw slip away in 2019 before the coronavirus pandemic, according to the study.

MTA efforts to stop fare evasion, including new turnstiles, have been met with mixed success.
The MTA faces an $800 million operating budget gap, watchdogs said.Getty Images

“Every minute during 2024, 330 subway fares and 710 bus fares were evaded,” the analysis states, noting it would be impossible for the MTA and NYPD to enforce every dodged fare.

The sobering study did offer a glimmer of good news, finding stepped-up law enforcement efforts led to steady decline in fare and toll losses starting in late 2024, even as ridership increased.

But Rein said the reduction shouldn’t distract from the staggering losses.

“From one perspective it’s good to see that reduction, from the other perspective we’re still seeing $900 million in losses, which is equivalent to three rounds of fare increases. And frankly these numbers are three times what they were before the pandemic,” he said.

The civic group recommended the MTA accelerate the rollout of new faregates, proof-of-payment measures on buses, work with city to assess the cost-effectiveness of deploying police officers to enforce fare payment and consider expanding the Fair Fares Program.

“Fare evasion is not victimless,” Rein said. “When people evade fares it really puts more of the burden on everybody else, everyone else who is paying the fare, the toll.”

MTA officials didn’t respond to requests for comment Wednesday.

https://nypost.com/2025/09/11/us-news/mta-lost-1b-to-fare-and-toll-evasion-last-year-bombshell-watchdog-analysis-finds/

IMF revamps climate, gender units after Bessent bashed lender over ‘mission creep’

 The International Monetary Fund, a post-World War II global lender designed to bail out debt-laden economies, is set to revamp its climate change and gender units after pressure from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, people familiar with the matter have told The Post.

The changes, first reported by Bloomberg News, will see both the IMF’s climate and development and inclusion and gender units folded into the DC-based body’s “macro-financial and structural policies” division, the sources said.

“In recent years, the IMF has become exceedingly woke,” said one DC insider. “So it’s a pleasant surprise to see them take a small step in the right direction.”

Bessent ripped both the IMF and sister body, the World Bank, over their “mission creep” by focusing on woke causes such as climate change and gender issues.Getty Images

Nile Gardiner, the director of the Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom at the Heritage Foundation, told The Post that there is “clearly zero patience in Washington” for these kinds of policies that he said “completely undermines the effectiveness of the international bodies like the IMF.”

“The IMF is pursuing a far-left climate change and gender agenda, which is completely unrelated to the role of the IMF. The American people have had enough of woke left-wing ideology running riot through international institutions. This madness has to end,” the former aide to the late British prime minister added.

The Post has approached the IMF and the Treasury Department for comment.

The move comes after Bessent used a speech in April to accuse the IMF and its sister organization, the World Bank, of “mission creep” by promoting left-wing causes over economic stability and rein in excessive spending.

“Focus on these areas is crowding out its work on critical macroeconomic issues,” the hedge fund mogul said at the time, “The IMF has been whistling past the graveyard.”

Papers written by the Fund’s experts have, in the past, backed causes such as net-zero and carbon taxes. The institution also takes part in providing data for the controversial global gender inequality index.

But shortly after Bessent’s April broadside, IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva shrugged off his criticism and claimed the organization did little in terms of climate change policy.

“People think we have climate experts, we don’t,” she said. “That’s not our job.”

The United States is the largest shareholder in the Fund, holding just over a 17% stake. It means any administration wields incredible influence in setting policy because major decisions require an 85% majority.

The move to effectively sideline the climate and gender teams will be formally rubber-stamped at the upcoming Fall meetings for both bodies in mid-October, the people familiar with the matter said.

The IMF was created out of the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944 in New Hampshire, where the US, the UK, and the former Soviet Union discussed how to shape the postwar global economy.

The 191-member body is often described as a lender of last resort because it helps bail out debt-laden economies, although critics say that it often demands austerity measures that are too harsh.

The changes, first reported by Bloomberg News, will see both the IMF’s climate and development and inclusion and gender units folded into the DC-based body’s “macro-financial and structural policies” division.Pool/ABACA/Shutterstock

This global financial firefighter was at the forefront of the European debt crisis in 2008 when Eurozone economies were sent into meltdown after the collapse of Lehman Brothers.

It asked nations such as Greece, Ireland, and Spain to slash social spending and trim back the public sector in return for loans backed by richer IMF members.

Ironically, officials at the global lender also enjoy lavish perks virtually unheard of in the private sector – and which many people in the countries that take its loans can only dream of.

The Post revealed in December how its staffers can gain cut-rate access to an upmarket Maryland golf and country club that costs regular Joes at least $20,000 to join.

The IMF’s top directors can rake in around $437,000 annually, compared with $52,000 for junior staffers, according to the latest publicly available salary information.

They can also pick up eye-popping retirement benefits, including “a generous final salary” pension and comprehensive worldwide health insurance, the IMF’s recruitment page states.

This newspaper has also uncovered the lavish travel policy at its sister body, the World Bank.

It sees jet-setting bureaucrats enjoy the use of first-class international travel – and sometimes even private aircraft for the body’s top brass – when they head abroad to lecture developing countries on raising living standards.

https://nypost.com/2025/09/11/business/imf-revamps-climate-gender-units-after-bessent-bashed-lender-over-mission-creep/