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2024-07-02 -Great Cultural Revolution
Can a law make social media less 'addictive'? Politicians are about to find out
Sure, it worked for cigarettes, sex, alcohol, speed limits and migration.
[BBC] New York just passed a law on "addictive" social media feeds for children, but some researchers are questioning what that actually means.

New York Governor Kathy Hochul was clear about her opinion of social media earlier this month, speaking at a press conference to announce the signing of two new state laws designed to protect under-18-year-olds from the dangers the online world.

The apps are responsible for transforming "happy-go-lucky kids into teenagers who are depressed", she said, but according to Hochul, the legislation she signed off on would help. "Today, we save our children," Hochul said. "Young people across the nation are facing a mental health crisis fuelled by addictive social media feeds."

Starting in 2025, these new laws could force apps including TikTok and Instagram to send some children back to the earliest days of social media, before content was tailored by users' "likes" and tech giants collected data about our interests, moods, habits and more. The Stop Addictive Feeds Exploitation (SAFE) for Kids Act requires social media platforms and app stores seek parental consent before children under 18 use apps with "addictive feeds", a groundbreaking attempt to regulate algorithmic recommendations. The SAFE Act will even prevent apps from sending notifications to child or teenage users between midnight and 6am – practically a legal bedtime for devices – and require better age verification to avoid children slipping through undetected. The second law, the New York Child Data Protection Act, limits the information app providers collect about their users.

"By reining in addictive feeds and shielding kids' personal data, we'll provide a safer digital environment, give parents more peace of mind, and create a brighter future for young people across New York," Hochul explained.
Posted by Skidmark 2024-07-02 00:00|| || Front Page|| [11145 views ]  Top

#1 If they could design a chip that stopped you from copying from one VCR to another, they can come up with a chip to lock kids out or restrict access. It won't be perfect, but neither are laws about killing or robbing. It becomes a matter of enforcement to abate the problem.
Posted by Procopius2k 2024-07-02 08:12||   2024-07-02 08:12|| Front Page Top

#2 Hochul’s version of a Michelle Obama school lunch.
Posted by Super Hose 2024-07-02 10:22||   2024-07-02 10:22|| Front Page Top

#3 'Sadfishing' social media trend could be symptomatic of 'concerning' issues, says psychologist
Posted by Skidmark 2024-07-02 11:32||   2024-07-02 11:32|| Front Page Top

#4 Bots Compose 42% of Overall Web Traffic; Nearly Two-Thirds Are Malicious
Posted by Skidmark 2024-07-02 12:06||   2024-07-02 12:06|| Front Page Top

#5 And five seconds later 20 work arounds were made.

The single most effective thing they could do is ban all electronic devices at public school campuses during class hours. Teachers and Parents too.

"But what about school issued electronics?"
If it has any connectivity capability, the 3rd graders will run circles around the IT department.
Posted by swksvolFF 2024-07-02 13:14||   2024-07-02 13:14|| Front Page Top

15:34 Skidmark
15:27 Skidmark
14:48 NoMoreBS
14:31 NoMoreBS
14:16 NoMoreBS
14:15 NoMoreBS
14:04 swksvolFF
13:47 Regular joe
13:43 swksvolFF
13:38 swksvolFF
13:34 swksvolFF
13:31 Abu Uluque
13:25 Heribertus Vedente
13:24 mossomo
13:20 Abu Uluque
13:14 mossomo
13:06 swksvolFF
12:51 Grom the Affective
12:31 Abu Uluque
12:20 swksvolFF
12:17 Abu Uluque
12:08 swksvolFF
12:08 ed in texas
12:05 ed in texas









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