When researchers inside Instagram began studying young users’ experiences on the photo-sharing app, they found that nearly a third of teenage girls said the platform made negative feelings they had about their bodies worse, internal documents show on.wsj.com/3Cb9QFU
“Teens blame Instagram for increases in the rate of anxiety and depression,” a slide from an internal Facebook presentation said. Among teens who reported suicidal thoughts, 13% of U.K. users and 6% of U.S. users traced those feelings to Instagram. on.wsj.com/3lr3o6D
The research offers the deepest look yet at what Facebook, which owns Instagram, knows about the app’s impact on teens and their mental health. Researchers concluded that some of the problems were specific to Instagram, and not social media more broadly. on.wsj.com/3hvQ5RA
In public, Facebook has consistently played down Instagram’s negative effects on teens, and hasn’t made its research public or available to academics or lawmakers who have asked for it on.wsj.com/2VGzS4d
Anastasia Vlasova joined Instagram at 13 and became entranced by the lives and bodies of fitness influencers. About a year ago, she started seeing a therapist after developing an eating disorder—something she attributes to her time on the app. on.wsj.com/3AcSXKn
Eva Behrens, a 17-year-old high-school student in Marin County, Calif., said she estimates half the girls in her grade struggle with body-image concerns tied to Instagram on.wsj.com/395NbOz
Facebook’s researchers said that Instagram should reduce exposure to celebrity content about fashion, beauty and relationships. A former executive recently questioned the idea of overhauling the app to avoid social comparison. on.wsj.com/3CegDOP
Teen boys aren’t immune. In a deep dive Facebook’s researchers conducted into mental health in 2019, they found that 14% of boys in the U.S. said Instagram made them feel worse about themselves. on.wsj.com/3hwIima

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More from @WSJ

13 Sep
Mark Zuckerberg has publicly said that Facebook allows its more than three billion users to speak on equal footing with the elites of politics, culture and journalism, and that its standards of behavior apply to everyone, no matter their status or fame on.wsj.com/3Aa7XZg
In private, Facebook built a system that has exempted high-profile users from some or all of its rules, according to an extensive array of internal company documents reviewed by the Journal on.wsj.com/2Xp1cEK
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10 Sep
Nearly 3,000 children lost parents in the Sept. 11 attacks. Now young adults or in their 30s, some talk of the pain of missing fathers they never met, and the burden of constantly being seen as victims. on.wsj.com/3A6YhPi
Being labeled a child of 9/11 was uncomfortable for Leah Quigley, who was born a month after her father’s death. Like others who never met their dads—about 86% of the lost parents were fathers—she knows hers mostly from photos and stories told by others. on.wsj.com/38U9Kpq
Nicholas Gorki, whose mother was pregnant with him when his father died in the attacks, was a worrier growing up. He imagines how life would be different had his parents moved out of New York, which they had considered before the towers fell. on.wsj.com/3DZU6aj
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26 Aug
Breaking: An explosion hit a crowd of Afghans trying to enter the Kabul airport, with no immediate word on casualties on.wsj.com/2Wk3wg5
At least three U.S. troops were injured in an explosion at the Kabul airport, a U.S. official said. The blast came after several of America’s allies said they were halting evacuation flights. on.wsj.com/3jpy5cZ
A second explosion took place outside Kabul airport. Witnesses reported multiple fatalities. on.wsj.com/2UQ424t
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24 Aug
The footage of Afghans falling to their deaths from a U.S. army plane departing Kabul became a defining image of America’s chaotic exit. This is the story of one young victim, reconstructed from interviews with friends, family and bystanders. on.wsj.com/3mv4AZ1
As hundreds of Afghans swarmed the airport runway, attempting to climb onto the taxiing 140-ton plane, 17-year-old Zaki Anwari powered through the scrum and clambered onto the landing gear. He held tight as it accelerated past 120 miles per hour. on.wsj.com/3kmktyb
Anwari, a player on Afghanistan’s national youth soccer team, had phoned his brother to tell him that if he didn’t flee, he would never play again.

“Do not go, go back, you are smart, don’t go,” his brother implored.

“I have to try,” Anwari replied. on.wsj.com/3gwPZZf
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20 Aug
The Taliban have wasted little time in collecting weapons from Afghanistan’s military, raising concerns about how easily troves of U.S.-made arms, military aircraft and armored vehicles have fallen into enemy hands and the new capabilities they bring on.wsj.com/3sALbGU
Scores of videos have emerged of Taliban fighters rejoicing near abandoned American helicopters, carrying U.S.-supplied sniper rifles and assault weapons, and driving Humvees and other U.S.-made military trucks on.wsj.com/2WfhTC1
The Taliban have seized airplanes, tanks and artillery from Afghan outposts and from evacuating U.S. personnel. The U.S. sent nearly 600,000 small arms, 76,000 vehicles and 208 airplanes to Afghanistan’s military and police from 2003 to 2016. on.wsj.com/3AY7ae5
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16 Aug
As the Taliban overtook Afghanistan, many American military veterans were left wondering if it was all worth it.

Some were ready for the war to be over. Others wanted the U.S. to stay. But most agree this was not the ending they wanted. on.wsj.com/3yXuGY0
Retired Army Sergeant First Class Sean Lee wasn’t necessarily surprised to see the Taliban sweep across Afghanistan during the past week. Instead, he was surprised at his own subdued reaction. on.wsj.com/3CRCmgG
Kevin Brewington, a former Army paratrooper, has been happy to see the U.S. pull out, tired of seeing troops get injured in a war that accomplished what he thought of as the big goal of finding Osama bin Laden on.wsj.com/3g7P5lA
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