đŸ¤¨
Seriously? I don't think you can put that genie back in the bottle...
BBC: Under-16s to be banned from TikTok, YouTube and other social media by next spring, Starmer says
đŸ¤¨
Seriously? I don't think you can put that genie back in the bottle...
BBC: Under-16s to be banned from TikTok, YouTube and other social media by next spring, Starmer says
I continue to wonder where the push for these blanket bans on social media, cell phones, etc. are coming from.
Since they manifestly do not help anyone.
The version here in Minnesota would involve "age estimation" done explicitly by surveilling everyone online.
I am just wondering if this is Facebook / Google / etc. pushing for bans that enable them to do more of the surveillance capitalism they already do to avoid actual effective regulation.
Or if there is some other motivation.
@cstross @michael_w_busch @JustinMac84 @ai6yr
I stumbled on a plausible argument that News corp is a big reason for pushing to ban teens from social media to get them back on traditional media.
https://www.techpolicy.press/youve-been-murdoched-australias-teen-ban-offers-a-warning-for-europe/
Having Australia and the UK be the first to go hard for teen bans is certainly consistent with it being due to news corp lobbying
I'm glad to hear personal experience supports this explanation, I'm always a bit worried trusting things on the net these days.
@Bern @alienghic @cstross @michael_w_busch @JustinMac84
They held a carefully stage managed summit which avoided any alternative views.
Then later used that summit as justification for the laws.
All the time Murdoch press, finch advertising and the "non profit" pushed it as the only solution.
Alternative views were drowned out or ignored.
Pushed through without understanding how, why kids use social media. How it would effect kids. Hanging out to dry the lonely, rural, those with family overseas, those with disabilities that get bullied in real life, but have online friends who don't care what they look like.
https://www.crikey.com.au/2024/11/21/teen-social-media-ban-jonathan-haidt-peter-malinauskas/