Meta Caves To The MPAA Over Instagram’s Use Of ‘PG-13,’ Ending A Dispute That Was Silly From The Start
from the silly-times dept
Back in October, Meta announced that its new Instagram Teen Accounts would feature content moderation “guided by the PG-13 rating.” On its face, this made a certain kind of sense as a communication strategy: parents know what PG-13 means (or at least think they do), and Meta was clearly trying to borrow that cultural familiarity to signal that it was taking teen safety seriously.
The Motion Picture Association, however, was not amused. Within hours of the announcement, MPA Chairman Charles Rivkin fired off a statement. Then came a cease-and-desist letter. Then a Washington Post op-ed whining about the threat to its precious brand. The MPA was very protective of its trademark, and very unhappy that Meta was freeloading off the supposed credibility of its widely mocked rating system.
And now, this week, the two sides have announced a formal resolution in which Meta has agreed to “substantially reduce” its references to PG-13 and include a rather remarkable disclaimer:
“There are lots of differences between social media and movies. We didn’t work with the MPA when updating our content settings, and they’re not rating any content on Instagram, and they’re not endorsing or approving our content settings in any way. Rather, we drew inspiration from the MPA’s public guidelines, which are already familiar to parents. Our content moderation systems are not the same as a movie ratings board, so the experience may not be exactly the same.”
In Meta’s official response, you can practically hear the PR team gritting their teeth:
“We’re pleased to have reached an agreement with the MPA. By taking inspiration from a framework families know, our goal was to help parents better understand our teen content policies. We rigorously reviewed those policies against 13+ movie ratings criteria and parent feedback, updated them, and applied them to Teen Accounts by default. While that’s not changing, we’ve taken the MPA’s feedback on how we talk about that work. We’ll keep working to support parents and provide age-appropriate experiences for teens,” said a Meta spokesperson.
Translation: we’re still doing the same thing, we’re just no longer allowed to call it what we were calling it.
There are several layers of nonsense worth unpacking here. First, there’s the MPA getting all high and mighty about its rating system. Let’s remember how the MPA’s film rating system came into existence in the first place: it was a voluntary self-regulation scheme created in the late 1960s specifically to head off government regulation after the government started making noises about the harm Hollywood was doing to children with the content it platformed. Sound familiar? The studios decided that if they rated their own content, maybe Congress would leave them alone. As the MPA explains in their own boilerplate:
For nearly 60 years, the MPA’s Classification and Rating Administration’s (CARA) voluntary film rating system has helped American parents make informed decisions about what movies their children can watch… CARA does not rate user-generated content. CARA-rated films are professionally produced and reviewed under a human-centered system, while user-generated posts on platforms like Instagram are not subject to the same rating process.
Sure, there’s a trademark issue here, but let’s be real: no one thought Instagram was letting a panel of Hollywood parents rate the latest influencer videos.
Next, the PG-13 analogy never actually made much sense for social media. As we discussed on Ctrl-Alt-Speech back when this whole thing started, the context and scale are just completely different. At the time, I pointed out that a system designed to rate a 90-minute professionally produced film — reviewed in its entirety by a panel of parents — is a wholly different beast than moderating hundreds of millions of short-form posts generated by individuals (and AI) every single day.
So, yes, calling the system “PG-13” was a marketing gimmick, meant to trade on a familiar brand while obscuring how differently social media actually works — but the idea that this somehow dilutes the MPA’s marks is still pretty silly.
Then there’s the rating system’s well-documented arbitrariness. The MPA’s ratings have been criticized for decades for their seemingly incoherent standards. On that same podcast, I noted that the rating system is famous for its selective prudishness — nudity gets you an R rating, but two hours of violence can skate by with a PG-13.
There was a whole documentary about this — This Film Is Not Yet Rated — that exposed just how subjective and inconsistent the whole process was. Meta was effectively borrowing credibility from a system that was itself created as a regulatory dodge, is famously inconsistent, and was designed for an entirely different medium. And the MPA’s response was essentially: “Hey, that’s our famously inconsistent regulatory dodge, and you can’t have it.”
The whole thing was silly. And now it’s been formally resolved with Meta agreeing to stop doing the thing it had already mostly stopped doing back in December. So even the resolution is anticlimactic.
But there’s a more substantive point buried under all this trademark squabbling: the whole approach reflects a flawed assumption that one company can set a universal standard for every teen on the planet.
As I argued on the podcast, the deeper issue is that the whole framework is wrong for the medium. The MPA’s rating system was built to evaluate a single 90-minute film, reviewed in its entirety by a panel of parents. Applying that logic to hundreds of millions of short-form posts generated by people across wildly different cultural contexts — a kid in rural Kansas, a teenager in Berlin, a twelve-year-old in Lagos — was never going to produce anything coherent. Different kids, different families, different communities have different standards, and no single company should be setting a universal threshold for all of them. The smarter approach is giving parents and users real controls with customizable defaults, rather than having Zuckerberg (or a Hollywood trade association) decide what counts as age-appropriate for every teenager on the planet.
This whole dispute was silly from start to finish.
Filed Under: content moderation, movie ratings, pg-13, social media
Companies: meta, mpa


Comments on “Meta Caves To The MPAA Over Instagram’s Use Of ‘PG-13,’ Ending A Dispute That Was Silly From The Start”
And let’s be honest. Film and game rating are a farce.
No big surprise
Instead of proudly being a mentor, they choose to be the bully.
Pg-13 is stupid to begin with. It’s what PG should be. Parental Guidance. Parents deciding whether or not their child is mature enough to see a particular movie. But people got upset because anytime a PG movie included anything that they might have to decide might be too graphic or adult for their child, it meant they had to make a decision instead of just letting someone else make that decision for them.
If PG-13 is parental guidance for children under 13, the what is PG? Under 10? 7?
Re:
If they were willing to make those decisions, ratings including “PG” would not have been created in the first place.
Of course, to my knowledge, the world is still waiting for the hypothetical child harmed by a movie (and I don’t mean nightmares, which are often triggered by G- or PG-rated things anyway).
I feel like the trademark is so ubiquitous that it’s already genericized. I’ve seen movie ratings on unrelated books, event posters, websites, etc. for decades. And you don’t need a trademark on it since it’s just meant to convey a (very vague) content warning.
Re:
I think people are largely unwilling to stand up to the bullies. Like, I’m reading a 20-year-old book, and the characters mention eating Jell-O and using Kleenex tissues. I have to assume the author wrote jello and kleenexes, as any normal person would, and an editor “corrected” them for legal reasons. I suppose we’re lucky we didn’t get a trademark symbol and a footnote saying who purports to still own these obviously-generic terms.
There are alternatives, Meta could always use the classification that Singapore’s Infocomm Media Development Authority has established. It is conveniently called PG13…
I’m surprised the MPAA hasn’t yet merged with the RIAA, forming the Music And Film Industry Association of America (MAFIAA).
Re:
You’re a day (and 20 years) late, but here you go.
It is a bad look to suggest that parents should provide guidance to their kids online, we’ll just pass more laws to make tech companies responsible for that.
If I were Meta, my filing would have said, “FUCK THAT!!”…oh…
It’s so sad that it’s 2026 and this censorial abomination still exists.
Every dog in this fight needs to be spayed or neutered and then euthanized.