Millions of children and teens lose access to accounts as Australia’s world-first social media ban begins (www.theguardian.com)
from SLVRDRGN@lemmy.world to world@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 15:13
https://lemmy.world/post/39943391

Australia has enacted a world-first ban on social media for users aged under 16, causing millions of children and teenagers to lose access to their accounts.

Facebook, Instagram, Threads, X, YouTube, Snapchat, Reddit, Kick, Twitch and TikTok are expected to have taken steps from Wednesday to remove accounts held by users under 16 years of age in Australia, and prevent those teens from registering new accounts.

Platforms that do not comply risk fines of up to $49.5m.

There have been some teething problems with the ban’s implementation. Guardian Australia has received several reports of those under 16 passing the facial age assurance tests, but the government has flagged it is not expecting the ban will be perfect from day one.

All listed platforms apart from X had confirmed by Tuesday they would comply with the ban. The eSafety commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, said it had recently had a conversation with X about how it would comply, but the company had not communicated its policy to users.

Bluesky, an X alternative, announced on Tuesday it would also ban under-16s, despite eSafety assessing the platform as “low risk” due to its small user base of 50,000 in Australia.

Parents of children affected by the ban shared a spectrum of views on the policy. One parent told the Guardian their 15-year-old daughter was “very distressed” because “all her 14 to 15-year-old friends have been age verified as 18 by Snapchat”. Since she had been identified as under 16, they feared “her friends will keep using Snapchat to talk and organise social events and she will be left out”.

Others said the ban “can’t come quickly enough”. One parent said their daughter was “completely addicted” to social media and the ban “provides us with a support framework to keep her off these platforms”.

“The fact that teenagers occasionally find a way to have a drink doesn’t diminish the value of having a clear, ­national standard.”

Polling has consistently shown that two-thirds of voters support raising the minimum age for social media to 16. The opposition, including leader Sussan Ley, have recently voiced alarm about the ban, despite waving the legislation through parliament and the former Liberal leader Peter Dutton championing it.

The ban has garnered worldwide attention, with several nations indicating they will adopt a ban of their own, including Malaysia, Denmark and Norway. The European Union passed a resolution to adopt similar restrictions, while a spokesperson for the British government told Reuters it was “closely monitoring Australia’s approach to age restrictions”.

#world

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Ziggurat@jlai.lu on 09 Dec 15:26 next collapse

Looks like a great news. Moreover, kids may learn how old school Internet works rather than being stuck in an algorithm bubble

rozodru@pie.andmc.ca on 09 Dec 16:21 next collapse

they start making php forums and using IRC, hey i’m all for that.

tdawg@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 17:35 next collapse

Typing games about to be fire again

redwattlebird@lemmings.world on 09 Dec 22:13 next collapse

Mumble and Pigdin won’t be banned right? Also, swapping mobile numbers and getting on conference calls… Writing letters and all that. There’s still other ways to communicate.

I’m almost thinking of making a quick phone app to give them options and ideas on how to communicate outside of the big tech bubble.

I wonder if making your own personal website on Neocities/Geocities will come back in vogue again.

Inkstainthebat@pawb.social on 11 Dec 08:56 collapse

YES PLEASE

T156@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 00:18 collapse

If enough of it is still around. A lot of the old spaces that used to exist aren’t around any more.

Plus things like YouTube and Discord aren’t banned, do chances are, they would end up there instead.

Github may be, strangely enough.

CaptainPedantic@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 15:38 next collapse

One parent said their daughter was “completely addicted” to social media

Have you tried parenting her?

kami@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 09 Dec 15:44 next collapse

How dare you imply that a parent should educate their children? Don’t you know how much they have to work hard already every single day to grow up the child no one forced them to have in the first place??

comrade_twisty@feddit.org on 09 Dec 16:47 next collapse

Are you insane? That sounds like work LOL.

ms_lane@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 17:01 next collapse

Parents who were can’t anymore, since there are no longer any parental controls.

CaptainPedantic@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 17:15 collapse

“Give me your phone, give me your laptop” works pretty well.

My phone has a giant “setup parental controls” button. You can block specific websites using tools like PiHole that are easy to set up.

newthrowaway20@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 17:34 next collapse

Lol ok just ask every parent who already can’t manage their children’s online habits to set up a pihole. I’m sure they won’t have any issues with that.

RickyRigatoni@retrolemmy.com on 10 Dec 16:18 collapse

PiHole is only easy to set up for us becaise we’re a group of giant nerds. The average parent will think you’re talking about their mouth when you say pihole.

tdawg@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 17:35 next collapse

Meh. It’s societal level issue. It should be handled at the societal level

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 22:37 next collapse

Yes. The societal level solution is the parents of the society choosing to do their jobs.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:09 collapse

Yah, a lot of people are raging at this but not providing any alternative to a studied and proven problem.

davad@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 18:53 collapse

True, but there’s also a little more nuance.

For a social media ban to be effective without ostracizing individuals, it has to include the entire friend group.

As an analogy, if the kid’s friends all text each other, but your kid doesn’t have a phone, they miss out socially. They miss out on organized and impromptu hangouts. And they miss out on inside jokes that develop in the group chat. Over time they feel like more and more of an outsider even if the ready of the group actively tries to include them.

BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 15:48 next collapse

On one hand I do think social media has ruined society, and kids should definately not be on it till their brain has matured a bit, on the other hand I worry how corrupt officials could use this in their favor

athairmor@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 16:07 next collapse

How could corrupt officials use this? I’m struggling to imagine how.

DarrinBrunner@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 16:18 next collapse

I suppose now that “the children are protected”, there aren’t any roadblocks to more intently exploiting the adults?

rozodru@pie.andmc.ca on 09 Dec 16:24 next collapse

because not everyone in the country is under 16. So if you’re in your 40s and suddenly decide you want to start using tiktok or facebook then you have to provide proof that you’re not a teenager. which means providing ID or selfies or both to whomever they use to verify your identity. Now with that info they can now build a profile about what you do online. Also the issue that what happens if this info you’ve provided is in a data breach. OR they simply sell it to data collection companies.

nuggsy@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 19:44 collapse

That and it’s a ‘social media ban’ which is a pretty broad term. Depending how you define social media it could ecompase a lot of other platforms not included in the initial list i.e. Steam, Discord, etc.

This could lead to further restrictions on freedom of speech and anonymity dependent on whatever agenda the government is pushing or to try to control dissent by forcing the poplace to provide some form of ID to access any platform/access the internet.

That may be a leap too far from where we currently are, but it’s an important factor to consider as it could have wider reaching consequences if left unchecked.

That being said, I think the large social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter are cesspools that prey on children/teens and are designed to be addictive even for adults.

It’s due to that I’m stuck on the fence a little. If anything we as a society should be looking to pressure social media companies to operate ethically.

What has happened instead is that the Australian government has basically pushed the onus on social media companies to block access to these platforms and threatened them with a fine. There’s no real plan for implementation, no push for education on social media and its issues.

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 22:41 next collapse

These laws are written deliberately broad to enable mass censorship. They don’t just ban sexual material, but use vague statements like “objectionable material.” Actual real-world news is being censored and kept from the eyes of teenagers. Pretty much anything on the Gaza war is considered objectionable material and inappropriate for children to learn about.

BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 15:12 collapse

It could be used as a wedge to further attack freedom of speech or they could require ID verification for anyone and then use that info to track you and target you if they think you are against them. The nazis used the census data to find and target Jewish people because back then religion used to be recorded in it, Trump and the republicans now require people on visa to have their social media accounts public so they can target anyone who they deem “anti American” and deport them. Any law should be made with checks and balances in place keeping in mind how the worst of humanity could abuse it

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 22:39 collapse

Nah. It’s not an age issue. It’s a social media issue. This stuff is bad for everyone. If you want to protect kids from the dangers of social media, start regulating how social media works for everyone. Why is it ok to start poisoning someone’s mind the minute they turn 18?

Arcane2077@sh.itjust.works on 09 Dec 16:03 next collapse

Some good silver linings here, but what everyone needs to remember here is that nobody would be supporting this at all if facebook wasn’t intentionally predatory and bad for (all) people’s brains.

If regulators in Australia had a spine they would call for an end to those practices, and now that’s infinitely harder to do

porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 09 Dec 16:38 next collapse

I think that’s easier said than done. There are a lot of negatives associated with social media and some are easier to put restrictions on (say violent content) but I don’t think we really have a good grasp of all the ways use is associated with depression for example. And wouldn’t some of this still fall back to age restricted areas, kind of like with movies?

But yeah, it would be nice to see more push back on the tech companies instead of the consumers

Arcane2077@sh.itjust.works on 09 Dec 16:49 next collapse

Oh definitely not easy, my point is that it’s even harder now

porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 09 Dec 17:00 collapse

Why do you say it’s harder now?

HK65@sopuli.xyz on 09 Dec 18:21 collapse

You can’t use the think of the children line

porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 10 Dec 08:35 collapse

True, but there is momentum. It’s empowering other countries and that could lead to a second pass at legislation in Aus after its not so outlandish or it could lead to another country doing something better and then Aus copying after the costly validation was done by someone else. I think waiting for perfect legislation likely leads to what we’ve had for a while and that’s even less / very little push back on tech companies

The_v@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 18:26 collapse

Its a very simple fix with a few law changes.

  1. The act of promoting or curating user submitted data makes the company strictly liable for any damages done by the content.

  2. The deliberate spreading of harmful false information makes the hosting company liable for damages.

This would bankrupt Facebook, Twitter, etc within 6 months.

Attacker94@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 19:21 next collapse

The act of promoting or curating user submitted data makes the company strictly liable for any damages done by the content.

I assume you don’t mean simply providing the platform for the content to be hosted, in that case I agree this would definetly help.

The deliberate spreading of harmful false information makes the hosting company liable for damages.

This one is damn near impossible to enforce for the sole reason of the word “deliberate”, the issue is that I would not support such a law without that part.

The_v@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:52 next collapse

I left out the hosting part for just that reason. The company has to activately do something to gain the liability. Right now the big social media companies are deliberately prioritizing harmful information to maximize engagement and generate money.

As for enforcement hosters have had to develop protocols for removal of illegal content since the very beginning. Its still out there and can be found, but laws and mostly due diligence from hosters, makes it more difficult to find. Its the reason Lemmy is not full of illegal pics etc. The hosters are actively removing it and banning accounts that publish it.

Those protocols could be modified to include obvious misinformation bots etc. Think about the number of studies that have shown that just a few accounts are the source of the majority of harmful misinformation on social media.

Of course any reporting system needs to be protected from abuse. The DMCA takedown abusers are a great example of why this is needed.

T156@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 00:10 collapse

This one is damn near impossible to enforce for the sole reason of the word “deliberate”, the issue is that I would not support such a law without that part.

It would also be easily abused, especially since someone would have to take a look and check, which would already put a bottleneck in the system, and the social media site would have to take it down to check, just in case, which gives someone a way to effectively remove posts.

porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 10 Dec 08:57 collapse

That kind of aligns with some actions I would love to see but I don’t really see how it helps in the example I used to highlight some of the harder things to fix, depression. How does that improve the correlation between social media use and depression in teenagers? I can see it will improve from special cases like removing posts pro eating disorder content but I’m pretty confident the depression correlation goes well beyond easy to moderate content.

Also, if we presumed that some amount of horrific violence is okay for adults to choose to see and a population of people thinks its reasonable to restrict this content for people below a certain age (or swap violence for sex / nudity) then do we just decide we know better than that population, that freedom is more important, or does it fall back to age restrictions again (but gated on parts of the site)? I’m avoiding saying “government” here and going with “population of people” to try to decouple a little from some of the negatives people associate with government, especially since COVID

But yeah, holding tech companies accountable like that would be lovely to see. I suspect the cost is so large they couldn’t pay so it would never happen, but I think that’s because society has been ignoring their negative externalities for so long they’re intrenched

ms_lane@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 17:00 next collapse

Some good silver linings here

Where?

The kids will move to less monitored platforms and even on things like YouTube, parental controls are now gone.

You need to have an account for parental controls to be applied to, kids aren’t allowed an account, vis-a-vis, no more parental controls or monitoring for problem content.

socsa@piefed.social on 09 Dec 21:09 next collapse

My greedy motivation is to not interact with children on the Internet. I don’t actually care what other people’s children do on the Internet beyond that.

The_Decryptor@aussie.zone on 10 Dec 04:46 next collapse

You need to have an account for parental controls to be applied to, kids aren’t allowed an account, vis-a-vis, no more parental controls or monitoring for problem content.

Except that YT hides pretty much everything interesting behind a login wall these days.

I tried to listen to a Daft Punk song yesterday in a private tab and was blocked.

wheezy@lemmy.ml on 10 Dec 09:45 collapse

As someone that grew up with an “unmonitored” internet. I can say that it was significantly more healthy than the profit driven “keep watching” algorithm that is all of social media today.

Yeah. I saw “two girls one cup” and “lemon party”. But, did I slowly have my perspective of reality changed by the 30 second videos I swiped on for hours at a time for days on end?

No, most of my time was spent learning about computers, “stealing” music, and chatting with my real life friends.

I don’t think a kid today can experience that internet anymore. It’s gone. But acting like “unmonitored” internet access is worse is pearl clutching and ignoring the fundamental problems the profit driven internet has created at the expense of societies mental health.

Kids will absolutely find another place to connect online in Australia. But, honestly, I think whatever that is will be healthier than the absolute brain rot that is profit driven social media.

We got to this point because parents think that kids need a monitored internet. Afraid of online predators. So it was passed off to corporations that learned how to systematically institute mental abuse in order to keep their apps open longer.

noobdoomguy8658@feddit.org on 10 Dec 19:39 next collapse

I just wanna say hi, and I remember those days, too.

For a long time, I couldn’t understand people saying they hate the Internet or their phone or anything like that, because I had been having a blast for so long and thought it was one of the most vibrant, fun, educational and useful part of my life that has taught me a lot.

But at some point I found myself scrolling the same site for hours, trying to tear my eyes off screen and telling myself that I wasn’t enjoying myself and that I should stop, but I just couldn’t. That’s when I finally understood.

I try to bring back intention to this. I think what I want to do online first before I do it – what topic to look for when I want to watch a video, what kind of news or discourse I want to read, what’s that on my mind that I want to share. Talking to my peers, I often feel like this kind of approach has long been lost to not thinking for yourself and wanting entertainment to just sort of happen to you, predict what you want, guess.

Big money figuring out the Internet has been a very bad thing.

happydoors@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 03:03 collapse

Preach it.

venusaur@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 17:21 next collapse

Wow I’m shocked you have no downvotes. I totally agree but Lemmy seems to hate internet restrictions, especially porn. Don’t come for their porn. They’ll destroy you.

socsa@piefed.social on 09 Dec 21:08 next collapse

There is literally nothing negative about this. Children will be exposed to less internet propaganda, and forums are generally much better with fewer children. Everyone wins.

Arcane2077@sh.itjust.works on 09 Dec 21:33 next collapse

I really hope you know we can tell you’re a child

socsa@piefed.social on 09 Dec 21:49 collapse

Certainly at heart

Arcane2077@sh.itjust.works on 09 Dec 23:37 collapse

No, it’s the lack of self-awareness that’s the giveaway

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 22:33 next collapse

And the suicide rate of queer and other marginalized kids will skyrocket. What’s a few thousand dead kids in the name of protecting the children, right?

stickly@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 14:16 collapse

Wasn’t aware that social media keeps kids alive?..

I’ve seen enough stories on kids being cyber bullied into suicide that I really doubt there’s enough happy inclusion on these platforms to balance that.

supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz on 10 Dec 19:43 collapse

Oh come on use your damn brain you are smarter than this, imagine growing up as a queer kid in the middle of nowhere in a very conservative community, can you really not get it through your head that maybe just maybe then the internet might be a lifeline for kids like that? Yes the internet is toxic, but that doesn’t mean the internet isn’t also a vital lifeline for countless very isolated people… who are isolated against their will.

stickly@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 19:53 collapse

I’m trying to “use my damn brain”, I want genuine research showing this as a benefit that outweighs the numerous and well documented negatives that social media causes in children and young adults (depression, social isolation, body image issues, extremist and regressive worldviews, sleep and concentration issues, and on and on…).

If you can actually show me that it saves queer kids from oppression in a way that couldn’t be done via other methods (school programs, library funding, safe and child friendly neighborhoods, media representation, etc.) then maybe we shouldn’t throw the baby out with the bath water. Otherwise this is keeping the baby by voluntarily flooding your house with sewage.

supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz on 10 Dec 20:10 collapse

If you can actually show me that it saves queer kids from oppression in a way that couldn’t be done via other methods (school programs, library funding, safe and child friendly neighborhoods, media representation, etc.) then maybe we shouldn’t throw the baby out with the bath water.

No, the onus is on you to prove your points before you assert something you potentially have no sufficient alternative for should be denied.

Here is a place for you to start educating yourself!

This review identified LGBTQ youths’ uses of social media to connect with like-minded peers, manage their identity, and seek support. In the few studies that considered mental health outcomes (5/26, 19%), the use of social media appeared to be beneficial to the mental health and well-being of this group [11,34,44,55,60]. In this systematic review, we identified the various important beneficial roles of social media, but the findings were limited by weaknesses in the evidence base. This information may be useful for professionals (eg, educators, clinicians, and policy makers) working with LGBTQ youth to consider the appropriate use of social media in interventions as it provides an evidence base for the role of social media in the lives of LGBTQ youths. These findings help further understand how LGBTQ youths use social media and its positive and negative impacts on their mental health and well-being. Further research is required to provide stronger evidence of how social media is used for connectivity, identity, and support and determine causal links to mental health outcomes. We recommend larger, representative, and prospective research, including intervention evaluation, to better understand the potential of social media to support the health and well-being of marginalized LGBTQ young people. It is imperative that social media is understood and its beneficial use is supported to ensure improved outcomes.

pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9536523/

Edit here is another

Just as the American Academy of Pediatrics has called for rethinking the shame-based narrative of a developmentally appropriate use of social media [33] clinicians might consider both the risks and benefits that social media use can have for youth and adults. Clinicians can work closely with local community organizations and advocate for positive policy change to better support LGBTQ + youth. There is a need for more research on BIPOC LGBTQ + adolescents as the intersectionality of their identities brings nuance to the interactions on social media and the impact this has on those populations [3, 4, 13, 15, 29]. There is also a shortage of research involving LGBTQ + youth of intersectional backgrounds, including rural, racial/ethnic minority, gender minority, and neurodivergent youth. Researchers are developing new tools like the Social Media Benefits Scale (SMBS) that can be used as a clinical tool to help develop and implement a social media strategy to give a new multidimensional way for professional practitioners to develop strategies for interventions [34]. Additionally, there are increasing digital modalities to mitigate the disproportionate high rate of online victimization and suicidal risk for LGBTQ + youth. At the University of Pittsburgh, an app called Flourish is being developed through codesigning to augment schools and mental health services for LGBTQ + youth who face online victimization [35]. Other digital interventions are being designed with LGBTQ + youth feedback, and concluded that tech-based tools, such as apps and chatbots, offer immediate, non-judgmental feedback but can feel impersonal [15]. Understanding informal learning and non-clinical contexts that can help shape the mental wellbeing of LGBTQ + youth will be critical. For instance, virtual camps during the COVID-19 pandemic that celebrated the LGBTQ + identity development and supported social network development reported longitudinally reduced depressive symptoms, friendship formation, and positive changes in self-esteem [36, 37]. This is an initiative that could be specialized to outreach underserved LGBTQ + communities such as rural BIPOC adolescents.

link.springer.com/article/…/s40124-024-00338-2

Edit 2 another

Social media can provide benefits for some youth by providing positive community and connection with others who share identities, abilities, and interests. It can provide access to important information and create a space for self-expression.9 The ability to form and maintain friendships online and develop social connections are among the positive effects of social media use for youth.18, 19 These relationships can aff

stickly@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 21:54 collapse

something you potentially have no sufficient alternative for should be denied.

Not having an obvious alternative ready doesn’t change the cost/benefit weight for society at large. Just because cars are the only way we have to navigate suburban sprawl doesn’t absolve them of being one of the worst modes of transport for safety, the climate, passenger efficiency, etc… We should be talking about radically restricting their use, not shrugging and trying a driver education bandaid.

For a laugh, a scoping review of social media and adolescent risks through 2022. Sure, plenty of questions on causality, but also quantitative articles on direct impacts to physical health and harmful exposure to constant ads. In dozens of articles, just 1 (one) article finding a positive socializing impact… I’m certainly leaning towards denial by default…

supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz on 10 Dec 22:23 collapse

For a laugh, a scoping review of social media and adolescent risks through 2022. Sure, plenty of questions on causality, but also quantitative articles on direct impacts to physical health and harmful exposure to constant ads. In dozens of articles, just 1 (one) article finding a positive socializing impact… I’m certainly leaning towards denial by default…

Wait… why would a scoping review of risks necessarily include evidence of a positive socializing impact? It is by definition a review of risks…?

stickly@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 00:03 collapse

Sorry, wording was unclear. Their methodology was pulling everything in pubmed on “social media” or “social network”, “health”, and “pediatrics”. Nothing particularly biasing in either direction.

Walk_blesseD@piefed.blahaj.zone on 09 Dec 23:38 collapse

Let’s legally require social media companies to gather even more sensitive information about their users, making them more vulnerable to identity theft in the process and isolating the most vulnerable in our society from their support networks. There is literally nothing negative about this.

You are a fucking imbecile.

stickly@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 14:43 collapse

Strangely enough, support networks can exist outside of social media. It’s very possible to directly message friends or neighbors without being subjected to the dregs of public social media. It remains possible to get world/local news without an attached public forum.

If you’re going to make a space that has content for adults and allows for free adult discussions (with all the nuance and complications that entails), then restrict it to adults only.

This is only a problem in conjuction with legislation requiring social media use (ie: as an official broadcast system, payment platform, electoral tool, etc…). If we fight that and force it to remain an opt-in disinformation platform then who cares?

As it currently stands nothing is forcing you on these platforms other than a conditioned familiarity. Even worse, there are no tech or legal protections preventing them uniquely identifying users today. Them getting an official state ID doesn’t change much. More barriers to entry for a shitty surveillance and propoganda platform? Literally no downsides there.

wheezy@lemmy.ml on 10 Dec 09:40 collapse

It’s a bandaid. And just like previous attempts like this all this will do is make Australian kids better at circumventing the censorship or using an alternative website. Which, honestly, is probably a positive in and of itself. I’d much rather my kid be visiting some random forum type website (like I grew up with) then the absolute brain rot that is social media algorithms.

Seeing “lemon party” posted before the mods removed it definitely fucked me up less than the slop being fed into the brains of teenagers on social media today.

KindnessIsPunk@lemmy.ca on 09 Dec 16:26 next collapse

Honestly it feels like you should regulate how Facebook can interact with children instead of the children’s access to it

a_non_monotonic_function@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 18:26 next collapse

That was my first reaction after processing the news–lets hold them accountable for hate, exploitation, etc.

If they can’t play nice they don’t get to do business at all.

Jajcus@sh.itjust.works on 09 Dec 18:36 next collapse

That is why I think FB and others might been quietly lobbying for this solution. This way they can stll be predatory, as long as the kids pretend to be adult. Or just abuse adult users. The alternative, of not being evil, is not compatible with their business model. But it is the business model that should be banned, not socializing online by teenagers.

pulsewidth@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 13:05 collapse

Tech giants are well known for lobbying against any legislation that gives them less freedoms to exploit markets and regulations of any kind that impact them - but this legislation that was targeted specifically at regulating them and removes a significant number of users - “this is suspicious, I think they might be the ones pushing it!”

There’s so many people in under this post trying to turn it into anything but what it is - legislation attempting to protect kids from the harms of social media. Which, again - are well documented.

Jumuta@sh.itjust.works on 10 Dec 02:15 collapse

just ban advertisements, it’s that easy

Dalraz@lemmy.ca on 09 Dec 16:30 next collapse

What could possibly go wrong, is the phrase that comes to mind.

PriorityMotif@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 18:42 collapse

Kids will become tech savvy again.

BassTurd@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 16:36 next collapse

I was watching a piece on this the other day on PBS and they had some sound bites from youths they interviewed. It really hit me just how much dumber kids get as I get older. They aren’t actually dumber, but my understanding about how ignorant they are just keeps getting clearer. I remember think similarly in my youth, so it’s not unique to this generation, so no shade, but kids are dumb.

foofiepie@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 20:09 next collapse

Er no. My progeny is a decade ahead of where I was at his age. Smarter and more self assured and stable.

He’s not dumber. But I’ve realised I am.

BassTurd@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 20:15 collapse

I’m not saying they are dumber than we were, I’m saying all kids are dumb due to ignorance. I do think that a lot of the current generation coming out is better adjusted than my generation, but they are still ignorant to the real world. The more I experience the real world the more ignorant I see that they are.

foofiepie@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 20:27 collapse

Ah I see. Yep. And it’s easier to see it as you get older.

Didn’t want to miss out on the chance to diss myself though. I was as dumb as a rock back then. And in many ways, still am.

BassTurd@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 20:46 collapse

Without a doubt. Like I said, I remember having views as a teen that were bad due to lack of life experience. I can look back into my 20s and think of plenty times where I was notably better than my teenage years but now I can see I still didn’t have it. It’s just the nature of growing up and getting older. We all evolve and have new life experiences that highlight our previous gaps in knowledge. It was just really noticable when I was listening to the sound bites in those PBS interviews the other week and it hit me like a truck. A sad, sad truck.

foofiepie@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 20:50 collapse

Does anyone know when we even start to feel like a grow up? I’m sure I’ll look back at my 40s and wince.

BassTurd@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 21:05 collapse

I’m not convinced it happens. I sure as shit feel like an old man some days physically, but my mind ranges from juvenile 12 year old potty humour to 70 year old get off my lawn and everywhere in between. It’s less often as I get older, but some days I get humbled when presented with something that I was sure was true that turns out to not be. It’s best to take it in stride as a learning opportunity rather than mope about it. It’s the xkcd “lucky 10000” situation.

frongt@lemmy.zip on 09 Dec 20:21 collapse

I think that’s just experience on your own part. I don’t think people have really changed for thousands of years. You can go read translations of ancient accounts, and they don’t really sound all that different from today, which is why Ea-Nasir is such a meme.

BassTurd@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 20:41 collapse

I’m not saying today’s youth is dumber than past youth, I’m saying all youth are dumb due to ignorance, but especially when it comes to social media since that’s relatively recent in the grand scheme of the world.

Bonifratz@piefed.zip on 09 Dec 16:48 next collapse

Australia’s world-first

So, Australia’s first?

SpacePirate@lemmy.ml on 09 Dec 17:16 collapse

No, Australia is the first country in the world to implement this ban. So it is correct as written.

ThomasWilliams@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 01:39 collapse

Except Britain already had it, so no. More horseshit from the media.

E_coli42@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 17:24 next collapse

Well, Reddit is useful. I used it before I was 16 for sure. There are useful subreddits like r/SAT.

sudoer777@lemmy.ml on 10 Dec 00:31 collapse

Reddit is how I got into my self hosting hobby in my teens

theneverfox@pawb.social on 09 Dec 17:30 next collapse

This is going to be a shit show.

I’m not opposed to the idea that kids shouldn’t have access to social media, but they obviously do. Their social lives are online, and their insecure little brains are going to scream that they’ve been kicked out of the tribe when you cut the link

The ban won’t work, but will also cause a lot of damage

ameancow@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:08 next collapse

but will also cause a lot of damage

Like what exactly?

theneverfox@pawb.social on 10 Dec 04:35 collapse

Like teenagers, who run off social validation, suddenly feeling like they’re excluded from their society

Kids are going to kill themselves.

And far more kids are going to develop complexes that they’ll never recover from

Social isolation hits the brain like physical pain. We’re hardwired to feel social isolation as trauma, logic can’t save you from feeling like you’ve been cut off from your peers

bcgm3@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 00:38 collapse

Withdrawal is an unpleasant, but necessary, part of detox.

On the other hand, I 100% agree it’s going to be a shit show. Technological development has outpaced the law as long as I’ve been alive, and the disparity is only growing… Authorities are not equipped to provide solutions to the problems that technology has created, and continues to create.

theneverfox@pawb.social on 10 Dec 05:19 collapse

Withdrawal isn’t what I’m worried about… You can’t cut teens off from their peers and get a good result

Those who can will evade, those who can’t will feel a crippling level of isolation. That doesn’t do good things to a teenage mind

EvilBit@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 18:20 next collapse

Curious to see what it’s like in 40 years when the world is ruled by Australians.

Aussiemandeus@aussie.zone on 09 Dec 20:38 next collapse

Have you seen mad Max?

MehBlah@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 20:50 next collapse

I kinda want to see that movie others were asking for. The one set in the mad max universe where the rest of the world was okay.

a1studmuffin@aussie.zone on 09 Dec 20:53 collapse

So like Beneath A Steel Sky but reverse Uno card.

EvilBit@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 00:58 collapse

I’ll get out my good loin cloth.

socsa@piefed.social on 09 Dec 21:11 collapse

Snakes will be reintroduced to Ireland.

EvilBit@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 00:57 collapse

Snakes for everyone. Everywhere.

lunelovegood@ttrpg.network on 09 Dec 18:33 next collapse

One parent said their daughter was “completely addicted” to social media

Literally the fault of the parent.

yes_this_time@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 18:55 next collapse

There is precedence though. We age gate: nicotine, alcohol, gambling etc…

we shouldnt expect parents to be monitoring children 24/7. actually, as children get older they should be given freedoms, parents have the right to expect our society has some guardrails.

yes_this_time@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 18:55 next collapse

Not to say it’s never the parents fault…

UnpledgedCatnapTipper@piefed.blahaj.zone on 09 Dec 21:35 collapse

The guardrails already exist. Put parental controls on your kid’s devices. Done, solved. Block social media sites, monitor what they’re doing online. Don’t go making it mandatory for everyone to give social media companies more information than they already have.

A better comparison would be “let’s put a government mandated ID scanner on everyone’s liquor cabinet so that their kids can’t access it! Oh you don’t have kids? Too bad, still need that ID scanner!”

Maybe the focus should be on a free (government funded, ideally FOSS) parental controls software suite that makes blocking social media on all major platforms (iOS, Android, Windows, Mac, and Linux) simple and easy. Promote it to parents, and get them to parent, instead of deanonymizing the internet for everyone.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:07 next collapse

The guardrails already exist. Put parental controls on your kid’s devices. Done, solved.

But nobody does that, and the problem is getting worse.

What’s your answer if you can’t get a population to make better choices and people are being harmed by something?

I’m not saying there’s a right answer here, I am genuinely looking for alternatives on a societal level to address a proven health problem.

lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com on 10 Dec 01:47 collapse

But nobody does that, and the problem is getting worse.

Past an education campaign, that’s a them problem. Imprisoning everyone would fix problems, too. Why don’t we do that?

ameancow@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 01:52 collapse

Past an education campaign, that’s a them problem.

Do you understand that most of all your comforts and life-saving blessings like our medical science, our transportation and infrastructure, and our logistical distribution systems and more come as a direct product of having enough intelligent, stable people to work through complex problems not just once, but every single day? What is the critical level before loss of this population becomes an existential threat to our survival and progress?

lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com on 10 Dec 01:55 collapse

Cool catastrophizing. Humanity will cope. People have a fundamental freedom to fail by their own doing.

Soggy@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 02:10 collapse

But children need to be raised and parents shouldn’t have carte blanche to fuck their kids up in the name of personal liberty.

lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com on 11 Dec 07:54 collapse

children need to be raised

by their parents

parents shouldn’t have carte blanche to fuck their kids

Legal processes for unfit parents already exist. Are you willfully ignorant for the sake of it?

If typical Australians are like this, then no wonder New Zealand ridicules them.

Soggy@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 10:13 collapse

I just firmly disagree that parents should have that much control over their offspring. Government-mandated care and responsibilities are important, this includes safety laws and restrictions. This includes limiting the stuff they’re exposed to.

yes_this_time@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:42 next collapse

The bans are for under 16s, not just 7 year olds. Parents don’t control all internet activity for 15 years, at that age they are going to have some autonomy outside of the house.

I’m not sure there is a direct irl analog when it comes to controlling digital spaces, since they are personal by nature. and I think this is where the debate comes in.

Should parents be following their teenage child into every store to make sure they aren’t buying alcohol?

I get the concern with providing social media companies a government ID, I certainly would never give them one! I would just not use them. But they provide net negative value in my opinion so no loss.

I like the idea of FOSS parental controls.

irelephant@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 14:41 next collapse

Linux isn’t close to being a major platform

lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com on 11 Dec 07:52 collapse

Maybe the focus should be on a free (government funded, ideally FOSS) parental controls software suite that makes blocking social media on all major platforms (iOS, Android, Windows, Mac, and Linux) simple and easy.

They already come built in every major OS. Parents only need to enable it. I’m stunned no one’s pointed this out.

This failure is entirely on the parents.

[deleted] on 09 Dec 19:15 next collapse
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GreenKnight23@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 19:53 next collapse

my kid was becoming a piece of shit watching all the YouTube/tiktok bullshit. so, I blocked access to those domains and now limit device access to a couple hours a week.

as a parent it’s my responsibility to protect my children from the dangers of the internet. it’s not the corporations responsibility to ensure the internet is safe for kids. the internet is not a fucking daycare.

since the change they have been far better behaved and respectful. so much so that teachers asked what changed and are currently trialing similar solutions with other parents with success.

you’re just giving excuses and zero solutions, I doubt you even have kids.

jordanlund@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:30 collapse

That’s something I’ve been telling people for years… Treat the Internet as you would the largest city you know of.

Would you take your kid to Times Square, turn them loose and say “Go have fun!” Of course not, that’s insanity.

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 22:32 collapse

No you ass. What do you want, for the parents to hover over their kids 24/7? There’s is no realistic way even the most well-intentioned parent could ever keep their kids off this stuff.

My parents had a two hour per day limit on using the computer. The one exception was if we were using it to do homework.

You’re just not very imaginative.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:04 collapse

Parents who were also raised by social media? This isn’t a new problem but it is a problem that’s getting worse, I don’t know if a ban is the answer but so far nobody has even suggested an effective alternative to reducing screen-time for both adults and kids.

This ban isn’t supposed to solve a problem overnight, but it’s supposed to influence some segment of the population to socialize, to form real communities and to hopefully grow up capable of helping their own kids not get addicted.

This is a real problem, it’s widespread across the globe and many, many studies have shown the harm social media has on a huge percentage of teens.

Also, parents work. Parents sleep. You can’t fucking hover over your teen night and day, you would hate that worse.

lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com on 10 Dec 01:48 next collapse

Parents who were also raised by social media?

Yes: their problem.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 01:49 collapse

I’m saying this is a societal problem, you may be 100% correct that it’s the parent’s responsibility to manage, but that isn’t happening and we can’t make it happen. Unless you think a law enforcing parental monitoring would be less fascist than a social media ban.

lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com on 10 Dec 01:51 collapse

Again, their problem: let them go to shit. It’s everyone’s fundamental right to fuck themselves over.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 01:54 collapse

Okay so you’re just some completely unserious edgy kid who doesn’t care about the betterment of anything, I am no longer interested in your opinions. Go live in the wilderness.

lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com on 10 Dec 02:00 collapse

No, society doesn’t owe people whatever you’re pushing. Liberty > bullshit state intrusion to act as everyone’s nanny. No one has to agree with your bullshit concern or agree to nonsense impositions.

Soggy@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 02:08 collapse

The concept of society is fundamentally opposed to your “everyone is responsible solely and completely for themself” ideal up there. I have a vested interest in people not throwing their life away.

lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com on 11 Dec 07:39 collapse

That’s like your dumb opinion, man. Freedom > pathetic dumbasses who drag everyone down by expecting everyone else to parent their kids. Morally, this is their problem, and the entitlement is unreal to pretend it isn’t. The most innovative societies respect freedom & expect people be accountable for their choices. The planet is better off with fewer people.

Soggy@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 10:16 collapse

Innovation is not the most important trait a society can chase, I’d rather judge on how they treat those that need the most help.

The planet is better off with fewer people

Fuck off with that ecofascist soft genocide shit.

2deck@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 01:56 collapse

The solution is education not bans. This is crazy. Regulating social media access has some major privacy concerns, will make parents more complacent and will only cause kids to seek other more dubious means of communicating. It also places a major wall in front of the development of new social media platforms.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 02:03 collapse

The solution is education not bans.

I agree.

But what do we do about the fact that even though our knowledge, research and understanding of the problem has increased, the problem has gotten worse? Is there more that can be done on that front that you think would be effective? Genuinely asking to help me shape my opinion.

It’s blooming into a larger-scale societal problem than just hoping enough people pull through, a lack of stable mental health and attention spans across large swaths of your population start to erode your society.

2deck@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 09:51 collapse

Of course! We force cigarette manufacturers to put the dangers of smoking on the package.

Walk_blesseD@piefed.blahaj.zone on 09 Dec 19:56 next collapse

Fuck this Helen Lovejoy-arse shithole country. I wonder how many abused youth, marginalised teens and kids who made the mistake of being born to parents living in remote areas just lost access to their support networks. I wonder how many people are gonna have their identities stolen because of data breaches containing either documents or biometrics necessary to enforce this.
And for what? So boomer politicians and their constituents aren’t challenged by their well-informed children about the genocides they’re facilitating at home and abroad? So the pigs in this police state have an even easier time surveiling citizens with all the identifying info websites are gathering??

ameancow@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:02 collapse

Social media use by kids and teens has been demonstrated factually to cause harm to people’s mental health and social lives. The sources are plenty and widespread.

I still don’t know if a ban is the answer, but at least it’s an attempt to address a problem. I’m curious what your answer would be to this growing problem?

Walk_blesseD@piefed.blahaj.zone on 09 Dec 23:30 next collapse

I figure holding tech giants directly accountable for the specific harms they’ve caused would be better than punishing an entire population but unfortunately our politicians are mostly either invertebrates who are too cowardly to pick fights with foreign corporate entities (so they’re useless drains of political will) or they’re actively supportive of them on the grounds of being ideologically pro-business (so, evil).

They feed us their poisons (surveillance capitalism and an unhealthy information ecosystem driven by algorithmic optimisation for advertising revenue) so they can sell us their “medicines” (age gating and mandatory identification online—more data harvesting as a selling point to advertisers) while they suppress our cure (an internet by independent creators as opposed to capitalist brands)

ameancow@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:37 next collapse

figure holding tech giants directly accountable for the specific harms they’ve caused

I don’t disagree that the entire institution is rotten and causing harm, but in terms of just socializing online, just the act of forming communities and forums and discussion groups and sharing content, the essence of what’s becoming harmful, what is the right answer here? The stuff that causes a lot of the harm is just what people tend to do online, because humans broadly are not meant to substitute real social connections for whatever is happening when we scroll and type and read other people’s thoughts and fantasies and depressed manifestos of strangers every day.

Even now, you’re reading my text inside your head in your own voice. The act alone of having this discussion is creating an entirely new kind of information pattern in your brain that we haven’t had in the last half-million years or so since our brains evolved. Do you know what this new kind of information processing is doing to your view of the world? Do any of us?

I know if you type “research teens social media health” into google you will have days of reading material about the research done and how harmful these practices are. But I’m not sensing that anyone even cares honestly. Is it better that we let whatever happens happen? I’m not being facetious, I want to know if people genuinely think that this isn’t a problem worth fighting.

Walk_blesseD@piefed.blahaj.zone on 10 Dec 00:48 next collapse

The stuff that causes a lot of the harm is just what people tend to do online…

The online harms I’m concerned with are bullying, harassment and misinformation. Platforms should be required by society to moderate against these, or face penalties proportionate to revenue. Instead just banning under 16s, even if it could be done in a way that is both effective and respectful of everyone’s privacy (I’m not convinced that it can) would still be a lazy abrogation of this responsibility, still leaving kids vulnerable to the same behaviours in offline spaces and everyone else vulnerable to the harms purportedly being caused among the youth online currently.
But the government isn’t interested in this because these behaviours serve to entrench existing social hierarchies, and the government—being in charge of the nation-state—likes existing social hierarchies.

supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz on 10 Dec 19:47 collapse

The stuff that causes a lot of the harm is just what people tend to do online, because humans broadly are not meant to substitute real social connections for whatever is happening when we scroll and type and read other people’s thoughts and fantasies and depressed manifestos of strangers every day.

Where is your hard evidence of this? Can you not make the same argument about a book? A TV? You cannot assert a statement like this as if it was indisputable fact.

absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz on 09 Dec 23:55 collapse

I figure holding tech giants directly accountable for the specific harms they’ve caused

What if; the social media giants are in another country. Your country doesn’t have jurisdiction there and can do fuck all in reality.

Maybe fine them??? Sure, which they will fight in court until the end of time; all the while the harm continues.

I don’t know if a ban will work, or what extra harms it will cause. But there are no good options to tackle this on the large scales of whole countries.

Algorithmic social media is mind cancer; if you have a better suggestion for tackling this issue. Let us know.

Lemmy is social media; but there is no algorithmic feed, my views are not being manipulated by some engagement maximizing machine.

Walk_blesseD@piefed.blahaj.zone on 10 Dec 00:15 collapse

What if; the social media giants are in another country. Your country doesn’t have jurisdiction there and can do fuck all in reality.Maybe fine them???? Sure, which they will fight in court until the end of time; all the while the harm continues.

The ban proves it’s possible to legislate, so maybe they should just legislate something better lol? Holding platforms accountable to a bare minimum standard of moderation against misinformation, bullying and harassment might be a starting point. And hey, if socmed’s really that bad for you, then us adults could benefit from this alternative, too! In any case, this ban is literally worse than just leaving the problem be.

absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz on 10 Dec 01:19 collapse

In any case, this ban is literally worse than just leaving the problem be.

I don’t really agree; the ban will do two things.

1/ it will show the social media companies that, Australia at least; has tools that they can use to reduce their power.

2/ show kids that this is really serious; it is not just your parents saying shit you can ignore.

Will some kids work out how to get around it; yep, 100%. Will it be a big portion; maybe, tech literacy is not as high as it could/should be.

Holding platforms accountable to a bare minimum standard of moderation against misinformation, bullying and harassment might be a starting point.

This would be great; but it is also too little too late. They have tried, and failed at exactly this for years.

And hey, if socmed’s really that bad for you, then us adults could benefit from this alternative, too!

It is that bad for you! Algorithmic social media is doing you harm.

Walk_blesseD@piefed.blahaj.zone on 10 Dec 02:24 collapse

Wall of text incoming.

1/ it will show the social media companies that, Australia at least; has tools that they can use to reduce their power.

Holding platforms accountable to a bare minimum standard of moderation against misinformation, bullying and harassment might be a starting point.

This would be great; but it is also too little too late. They have tried, and failed at exactly this for years.

I don’t see how both these claims can simultaneously be true. Either Australia has tools to hold these companies to account, in which case, how would they have previously failed if they’d already tried? Or it doesn’t, and this is just one more completely futile policy that won’t give companies any more than the usual slap on the wrist if it ever goes to court.

I argue that they didn’t try, because they never actually cared about children’s wellbeing, because if they did they’d have done better than this, ergo this policy isn’t really about that and is actually about making citizens more easily identifiable online.

Additionally, it does nothing to reduce the power of seppo tech giants. On the contrary, they’ve got money, they’ll be fine. Independent social media sites however, don’t all have the resources to implement verification systems, so some will feel the financial burden of compliance a lot harder, and others will simply cease serving Australian users, further strengthening Silicon Valley’s hold over the internet.

As I have said over and over again in this thread, what the ban will do is cut children suffering domestic abuse (a problem that is absolutely rife in this country) off from their support networks. It’ll cut minority kids that’re subjected to bullying by their peers off from their communities. It’ll drive more kids to shadier corners of the internet where they’re at greater risk of predation. I’m not being hyperbolic when I say this is going to get children killed.
Furthermore—and again, as I’ve been repeating all over this thread—everyone—yes, that includes adults—will be required to submit personally identifiable information to private organisations just to communicate with other people online, making anyone in this country who uses social media a potential victim of identity theft the moment a data breach happens. And happen it will. It’s happened before, and it’ll happen again.
What’s more, knowing that the platforms they’re using have their identities will make a great many people more hesitant to speak critically about existing power structures, especially the government. This is bad.

I stand by my previously stated opinion that all this is worse than the status quo, but even if it weren’t you should be asking why this is the solution that the government came up with.

absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz on 10 Dec 03:56 collapse

I don’t see how both these claims can simultaneously be true.

Sorry, my poor communications…I was referring to the social media companies, when I said they had been trying and failing for years. Not trying that hard mind you; moderation is a very expensive problem to solve, and they don’t want to spend money they don’t explicitly have to.

(it’s) actually about making citizens more easily identifiable online.

Maybe. That is speculation, probably a nice little side effect. But not the primary goal.

Independent social media sites however, don’t all have the resources to implement verification systems, so some will feel the financial burden of compliance a lot harder, and others

This is a great point; and there is an easy way to solve this problem. Not that the govt will care that a simple solution exists. If you don’t have an algorithmic feed a lot of the spread of misinformation is curtailed. If you are not allowed to host images/video etc directly than the moderation of them can be off loaded to 3rd parties.

What’s more, knowing that the platforms they’re using have their identities will make a great many people more hesitant to speak critically about existing power structures.

Another great point. I don’t have a good answer to this one, but there are anonymous leak avenues etc for serious stuff.

2deck@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 01:50 collapse

I know parents who successfully regulate their kids access to social media, games, tv, movies. Pushing this regulation is not the solution. Does more damage and will only make parents more complacent.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 01:59 collapse

I don’t disagree with any of that.

I am mostly asking people here what they think the alternative should be. Like you say, parents who manage and monitor this are going have better outcomes… but that’s not the norm, and the problem is getting worse despite all of us having more knowledge and proof how vital it is for their kids to have their internet use managed. So I am not convinced any kind of education campaign is going to do much. Most parents are just as addicted to their phones and rather scroll than parent. This is a societal problem with many intersecting problems.

socsa@piefed.social on 09 Dec 21:07 next collapse

ITT: figuring out who is under the age of 16

redwattlebird@lemmings.world on 09 Dec 21:31 next collapse

I wonder if Roblox squeezed through the cracks.

Michal@programming.dev on 09 Dec 21:35 next collapse

The ban also affects everyone who isn’t willing to undergo the age check.

Kids will find a way around is. They’ll move to fediverse, and the cooler kids will still hang around the mainstream platforms thanks to their older friend, sibling or cool uncle.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:00 next collapse

It’s not designed to be perfect, it’s designed to influence a population towards better practices. If it even makes just 10% of young people grow up a little less alone and less asocial, it will be a success. That success can be built on and maybe in time we can push cultures in regions to not want to use social media as a substitute all the time. There is a very real effect how laws influence the attitudes of people.

KaChilde@sh.itjust.works on 09 Dec 23:23 collapse

It’s not designed at all. Some pearl-clutches said “won’t somebody think of the children”, and then made the social media companies figure out how to implement the ban.

The social media companies all looked at the free, government mandated access to user biometrics and complied.

Do I think that social media should be restricted for children and teens? Sure. Do I think this if going to go about as well as the 2007 porn filter that the government tried to implement? Absolutely.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:30 next collapse

Do I think that social media should be restricted for children and teens? Sure.

Okay, I agree and I am not exactly cheering for government telling anyone what they can and can’t look at… but what’s the alternative here? I am cautiously siding with the idea behind the regulation if not the execution, but so far nobody has suggested what we do about a problem that is real, proven and studied and is leading to a worse world.

I’m being serious here and in good faith. Should we do anything?

Am I in the wrong here for thinking we need to do something about this? Or is everyone just okay with whatever the end-result will be from subsequent generations of people growing up anxious, depressed, lacking social skills, without relationship partners? We already have “loneliness” being considered a global health risk, and it’s tied directly to digital communication habits. I would ask you or anyone here to just type “research on health social media teens” in google. Just try it and see how much work has gone into studying this problem.

lightsblinken@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 13:23 collapse

yeah we need to do something about it, and people seem to be trying their best to come up with bullshit arguments against it. “people will find ways around it” and then saying not to bother etc i mean, people under 18 sneak into clubs and get beer… or maybe fake an ID and hit a pub… or get an older friend to do something for them… it doesnt stop us as a society holding a view that under age drinking isnt great, and we make some effort to enforce that even if its not perfect.

supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz on 10 Dec 19:36 collapse

Wait, do you honestly believe that drinking age laws like the US has leads to less alcoholism, less underage drinking and less deaths from teenagers overdosing on alcohol?

Are you out of your mind?

lightsblinken@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 01:10 collapse

do i think that drinking age laws restrict access to drinking? well, yes, i do. if i consider the impact of going from “drinking age laws existing” to “no laws existing at all”… would i be surprised to see a surge in drinking sales for minors? no. its not magic, and it doesn’t fix society issues, but that doesn’t make drinking age laws wrong either.

supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz on 11 Dec 01:34 collapse

if i consider the impact of going from “drinking age laws existing” to “no laws existing at all”… would i be surprised to see a surge in drinking sales for minors? no.

If that occurred that would only conclusively prove an abrupt non-linear change may be bad with a law that impacts so many people and aspects of society…?

MonkeMischief@lemmy.today on 10 Dec 02:31 next collapse

Some pearl-clutches said “won’t somebody think of the children”, and then made the social media companies figure out how to implement the ban.

Bingo.

It’s never about “the children.” It’s a way to normalize handing over biometrics and anonymity to an assumed authority to use the internet.

It’s always about control, control, control. It’s about tying real identities to online activity, then it’s about wholesale harvesting your secrets you didn’t even know you were keeping.

Then it’s yet another instrument to make sure you shut up and don’t step out of line or else.

First they take us away from our kids by necessitating that entire households need full time careers to survive.

Then as a substitute for education and actual parenting we’re so eager to offer up our childrens’ futures in the name of “protecting” them from the inevitable consequences of parentless households.

lightsblinken@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 13:08 collapse

people show ID to get into a bar, doesn’t feel that far away from this. its not a substitute for parenting , though it is another layer

harmbugler@piefed.social on 10 Dec 13:21 next collapse

The bar’s not storing your information. If this was just age verification on entry, that would be similar.

lightsblinken@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 00:59 next collapse

yeah understood. the intention is good but concerns exist re implementation. what are some other approaches that could he used?

harmbugler@piefed.social on 11 Dec 03:13 collapse

Beforehand the user gets a personal key from the government, then when a site asks for proof of age, the user signs a token which the site sends to the government server with a query “Is this user over 16?”. Then the government server identifies the user with the token, and responds to the site “Yes” or “No”.

The site cannot see any of your personal information, just that you are over 16.

I’m surprised the government isn’t doing the verification themselves as it has a huge information/tracking incentive to do so.

ThomasWilliams@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 01:20 collapse

Bars are required by law to store the identification documents of patrons in Australia.

MonkeMischief@lemmy.today on 10 Dec 18:02 collapse

Like the other reply said, when you go to a bar you’re just showing your birthdate to some guy at the front for a few seconds.

Now, if the bar demanded to make a scan of my ID and uploaded it to some server, and reported my entry to said bar to the government or some privatized authority, then handed that data to some algorithm to cross reference everywhere else I’ve been to build a profile on my behavior, then established various metrics based on who I was seen hanging around…then probably sold all of that to a bunch of marketing firms…

And on and on. Now imagine it’s been doing this since you were like 16.

If this sounds far fetched and overblown, I invite you to look at how US law enforcement uses dragnet surveillance like “stingray towers” to hand information to ICE, then make a decision as to whether “The Good Guys” or anybody else should be allowed to follow your footsteps across the Web.

Edit: quick side tangent:

The hilarious part is how the parties pushing for this “fOr ThE ChiLdReN” surveillance capitalism will also be the first to cry “Leftist Nanny State tho! Muh personal responsibility!” When people want something like universal healthcare.

lightsblinken@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 01:02 next collapse

agree, so the idea is ok but the way they are going about it sucks. what are some fixes?

ThomasWilliams@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 01:19 collapse

Now, if the bar demanded to make a scan of my ID and uploaded it to some server, and reported my entry to said bar to the government or some privatized authority, then handed that data to some algorithm to cross reference everywhere else I’ve been to build a profile on my behavior, then established various metrics based on who I was seen hanging around…then probably sold all of that to a bunch of marketing firms…

That is in fact a requirement for bars in Australia.

harmbugler@piefed.social on 11 Dec 03:06 collapse

It’s been that way for a while with clubs and some designated bars, but when did this happen with all bars?

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 09:40 collapse

Some pearl-clutches said “won’t somebody think of the children”, and then made the social media companies figure out how to implement the ban.

It’s more than pearl-clutching though.

Kids dependency on social is a genuine social problem. Any parent that cares about their kids is deeply concerned about this.

I don’t really buy the “govt access to biometrics” angle. These companies have all the biometrics they could ever want.

The ban is going to be easy to circumvent technologically, but not so much socially. At this very moment, being the evening of 10 December, families around Australia are having conversations about social media and the problems it can cause.

sobchak@programming.dev on 10 Dec 06:21 next collapse

The Fediverse is social media. Wouldn’t instances be required to do age verification? I mean, I guess that’d only be enforceable on Australian instances, but it seems like the whole world is going in that direction.

Scrollone@feddit.it on 10 Dec 07:12 next collapse

Exactly, people keep talking about VPNs, but where will we connect to if the whole world goes to shit?

Ibuthyr@lemmy.wtf on 10 Dec 17:36 next collapse

Maybe just live a happy life instead? Lemmy is an ok place, but even this is just completely unnecessary. Mankind isn’t cut out for so much information and communication.

supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz on 10 Dec 19:34 collapse

Mankind isn’t cut out for so much information and communication.

You don’t get to decide that for other people

maam@feddit.uk on 10 Dec 18:58 collapse

Canada is trying pass this nonsense.

Kill bill s-209

ThomasWilliams@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 01:18 collapse

Lemmy requires you to be over 18 to open an account in Australia now.

harmbugler@piefed.social on 10 Dec 13:20 collapse

The ban also affects everyone handing over their ID to websites. Now your personal info can get more easily stolen and you can also be tracked better.

0x0@lemmy.zip on 10 Dec 21:25 collapse

This is the whole point, kids are an excuse as always.

myfunnyaccountname@lemmy.zip on 09 Dec 21:58 next collapse

OMG! This is an outrage! What will the shareholders do!!! Make less money?! Never!!

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 22:30 next collapse

Where are children supposed to meet and socialize? We already took away all their in-person spaces.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 22:58 next collapse

We already took away all their in-person spaces.

Arcades and malls have been dead for a long time. Capitalism took them away.

Everyone is missing incentive to go outside and hang out with real people, but that’s only because we have an alternative that fills you up and requires less effort. Our “socializing” is junk food, it only harms you.

Maybe more young people will start doing what kids have been doing since the dawn of time, and making their own communities and their own places to hang out and play and do active things together, face-to-face.

WoodScientist@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:08 next collapse

Most malls ban unaccompanied minors. And most places where kids used to hang out similarly discourage their presence. The death of third places is a well-documented phenomenon, one that goes back decades before anyone dreamed of social media. And while kids have been forming their own communities since the dawn of time, kids haven’t been raised in suburban hellscapes since the dawn of time. If you can’t drive. If there’s no way to your neighorhood except a giant highway that’s impossible to bike on, how in the hell are kids supposed to meet up with each other in person? Digital technologies are really the only way kids have to socialize nowadays. We’ve taken everything else from them.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 23:17 collapse

Digital technologies are really the only way kids have to socialize nowadays.

I don’t disagree, but digital technologies are causing a lot of harm. I thought I would prepare for the discussion with a couple links to some suggestive studies, but there have been so many rigorous studies and scientific papers on the harm of social media on young minds that I don’t even know where to start. Denying it is like denying climate change at this point.

And maybe my take is becoming radical, but I don’t think we should be looking at it in terms of a youth/adult problem. There are likely far more adults addicted to the junk-food substitute that is arguing on twitter or making separate identities to fabricate ideas on message boards who have completely lost their handle on reality. Relationship rates are plummeting, people are so lonely it’s being declared a health emergency.

Like, seriously… what should we do? I know the popular answer is to attack the social media companies and “regulate” them but the problem is more fundamental than advertising, it’s that we’re not evolved to socialize with words on screens, seeing all these thoughts and feelings and unchecked wild, emotion-provoking, short-attention-span messages isn’t good for us. It may make you laugh spending an evening scrolling dumb memes, but if you do something like that every night, you’re missing time that you could be spending improving your life, your health, your relationships and so on.

And replacing those evolved drives with something else, something alien to us.

MonkeMischief@lemmy.today on 10 Dec 02:17 collapse

As a millennial I honestly just miss how something like MySpace was basically a micro blog, and otherwise, we just chatted with friends-only programs like Yahoo! Messenger / MSN / ICQ/ whatever. There wasn’t really some motive to “connect” you to a million “randos” and make you slavishly compete for their fickle approval.

Growing up in a weird kinda rural/suburb hybrid area, the Internet was my gateway to the world outside of school.

It definitely had its problems and drama, but mostly we chatted with people we actually knew (Yahoo chatrooms notwithstanding. Yikes lol) and didn’t care about what was “trending” across the world. Algorithms didn’t control and force perception of our reality then.

It was literally just about enabling communication.

Outside of that, there was also a much better culture of maintaining privacy and anonymity online, and that everything you see online is BS until proven otherwise.

Of course, this was before techbros decided we should use our real identity everywhere for all to see.

Nowadays it seems like every service is about using your friends as bait to connect you to some hivemind of toxic manipulation to farm you for ads. It encourages creating cults and scams and brainrot bullshit because it’s all about harvesting people’s already-strained attention for profit, instead of just being a communication platform.

TL;DR: I remember the Internet as a place to log in and hang out, then log off, when meeting with friends outside of school was a logistical nightmare reserved for things like birthday parties if you were lucky.

A lot of damage is already done, but I think if we obliterated the Facebooks and Instagrams and TikToks of “social media” and instead it focused on augmenting existing relationships rather than siloing people as a billion lonely socially-starved individuals in a crowd, we’d see it much differently…

ameancow@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 02:49 collapse

Would you be in favor of nationalizing the internet in order for this to work? That is, no more commercial entities controlling access, no more media sites allowed to use algorithmic or artificially intelligent systems to influence the viewing habits of users, no more ads working their way into everything you see and do, no more sensationalized headlines and distracting video titles competing for attention because it will all be demonetized by law. (ideally, in a world of spherical, frictionless cows.)

In the US the government used to have standards and regulations for things like if a kid’s show could be exclusively used to market toys, or that news stations had to follow a fair press agreement. The reason for this was all access to television had to go through airwaves, and the broadcasters for those airwaves were US government property. All broadcasters had to follow a host of rules and guidelines. This is why cable news was such a world-changing thing. Cable was privately owned.

This also has the side effect of the government controlling the news narrative, and I think we have seen enough of that.

I just don’t really know if there’s a good solution here, for a problem that has to have a solution or we all suffer.

Walk_blesseD@piefed.blahaj.zone on 10 Dec 00:23 collapse

Arcades and malls have been dead for a long time.

Comment clearly made by someone who does not actually live in the country this discussion is about. Shopping centres are doing just fine.
(To be clear, I am firmly against the ban)

MonkeMischief@lemmy.today on 10 Dec 01:58 next collapse

This. I feel so bad for teenagers.

They’re at a time in their lives where community and free association are vital to them, and yet since they’re not necessarily a profitable demographic, they’re kicked out and shunned by everywhere that’s not home or school, because all that’s left is “commercial spaces.”

People then wonder why teenagers flip off society and get up to no good, and then maybe wonder why we all turned out to be lonely adults with like maybe one long term friend if we’re lucky…

pulsewidth@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 03:09 collapse

In Australia we have this thing called school, all the kids go there.

I have kids at ages affected by this ban. They don’t care about it at all. They already communicate with their friends via iMessage and FaceTime (both unaffected by the ban), they walk to school - so they often walk with friends. Theres a small skate park near the local shops they also walk to and hang out with friends sometimes, they also walk to the shops and practice basketball with friends at nearby ovals with practice courts regularly. They go to cinemas or big shopping centres (malls) with their friends sometimes - but have to be driven there anyway so parents have to coordinate.

TLDR: the ban doesn’t affect a lot of kids at all, and they socialize more or less the same as I did when I was a kid.

The only kids heavily affected are those with Snapchat, Tiktok, Facebook and other crap that they shouldn’t be on to begin with, and are getting a huge favour done to them by removing them for a few years.

Poojabber@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 00:22 collapse

They will probably increase their profits, by finding methods of marketing to kids at increased prices like the tobacco and alcohol industries have done for ages.

ikidd@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 22:17 next collapse

The algorithm loses some victims for a few years, maybe

chunes@lemmy.world on 09 Dec 22:24 next collapse

Props to Australia for creating a generation of kids with above average tech skills.

idefix@sh.itjust.works on 10 Dec 18:40 collapse

Not sure that’s a valid argument. Accessing social media is not a prerequisite to installing Linux on half-broken hardware

yazomie@lemmings.world on 09 Dec 23:52 next collapse

Did they also ban Github after all?

Siegfried@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 00:05 next collapse

I just expect that they dont end up making social media super cool

palordrolap@fedia.io on 10 Dec 00:37 next collapse

Who's next to be blocked?

I mean, now that the infrastructure and policies are in place, it's only a matter of time.

skisnow@lemmy.ca on 10 Dec 01:59 next collapse

I’d be down with banning everyone from social media

CaptainBlinky@lemmy.myserv.one on 10 Dec 02:44 next collapse

I’d be down with banning everyone from social media

i’d just be down for banning social media. Not sure how that would look though.

supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz on 10 Dec 19:39 collapse

Then why are you here!!!?? I don’t get this blanket cynicism for social media, if you don’t like it as a concept than why the hell are you here? Please leave if you truly feel that social media is inherently bad, you are just a toxic influence on this social media community at a fundamental level if that is actually how you feel. Otherwise if you are going to stay you need to think more critically about this and nuance your views.

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 04:18 next collapse

I’m genuinely curious who you think will be blocked next?

palordrolap@fedia.io on 10 Dec 07:11 next collapse

People with a serious criminal record. Murderers and worse. Those who leave their victims alive but scarred mentally or physically.

Then those with less serious criminal records. Fraud. White collar crimes. That sort of thing.

Then other "undesirables" depending on who isn't liked by whoever's in charge.

And then the goalposts for what's desirable will start to move.

And the scope won't just be limited to social media. Websites will be categorised further. Some might remain open access to all people (except the ever increasing list of those to be protected and those who shouldn't have access) but others? No. Those sites themselves are undesirable.

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 09:29 collapse

Ooh, and social credit! Maybe you’ll need to earn social credit which you’ll require to access some websites, with some like social media only being provided to people with a high enough social credit score! /s

prex@aussie.zone on 10 Dec 14:59 collapse

The age & general cohort of who this applies to is in the legislation (under 16s).
Think more about which sites/platforms it applies to. There was some indecision about YouTube (its in EDIT: utility kids is out) & but signal/whatsapp/telegram are not affected - yet.

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 21:46 collapse

Think more about how to communicate.

What’s your point?

prex@aussie.zone on 11 Dec 08:04 collapse

This legislation only bans people under 16 years of age. To change that requires a whole new bill & vote in both houses of Parliament.
I can’t be much clearer than that

prex@aussie.zone on 11 Dec 08:12 collapse

The sites that are being policed are chosen by the office of the australian information commission & esafety.
It is already growing

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 11 Dec 08:46 collapse

This was always the stated plan though.

prex@aussie.zone on 11 Dec 08:54 collapse

Yes - that’s how laws work.

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 11 Dec 11:24 collapse

This must be the most tedious conversation since the dawn of the internet.

I replied to some nutter inferring that this was some dastardly overreach by our authoritarian overlords.

Then you show up, basically saying the same thing I am but in the most unintelligible and snarky way possible?

SleepyPie@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 05:15 next collapse

Not every new law is a slippery slope that leads to something, this line of reasoning is literally a fallacy.

When we blocked youth from drinking, we didn’t inch towards making it illegal for people in their 30s did we? Worst we got was like 21 in some places.

ThomasWilliams@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 01:21 collapse

The definition is so vague they can block literally any web site.

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 10 Dec 00:52 next collapse

So Australia is using facial scanning to verify age, allowing everyone else to remain anonymous? That’s how it should be done.

Here in Florida MAGA HQ, I’m hearing calls to verify the identity of EVERYONE on the Internet, because that’s the ONLY way they can keep the kids off. I even heard one MAGA state legislator say that it’s no difference then carding people for buying alcohol. That’s how we keep booze out of the hands of kids, so it will work to keep the Internet out of their hands, too.

They want to kill Internet anonymity, just as a report comes out that the DoJ wants to pay bounties to people who report “anti-Trump behavior.”

This will go to the Supreme Court before we’re finished.

0x0@infosec.pub on 10 Dec 01:12 next collapse

This comment reads like you believe only people under age 16 will be required to verify and anyone above won’t.

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 10 Dec 01:50 collapse

Yeah, I assumed. Are they verifying EVERY adult who wants to get on the Internet? That’s a problem.

nickyEtch@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 01:54 next collapse

How else will they know if the person is over 16, or just pretending to be over 16?

Gotta verify everyone, scan all of their faces.

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 10 Dec 01:56 collapse

Here in America, they want Driver’s Licenses, with names and addresses. There is no good faith in this effort. They want to tie every person to their online activity, and protecting kids is just an excuse, as usual.

Mannimarco@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 06:00 collapse

Same thing in Australia

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 10 Dec 06:36 collapse

That sucks. My kid was in the Internet as a teen, and he hardly ever killed himself.

0x0@infosec.pub on 10 Dec 02:03 collapse

Ofcourse, it’d be impossible to only card minors…

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 10 Dec 06:42 collapse

Minors don’t have to prove they aren’t adults, adults have to prove they aren’t minors.

It’s for the kids, you Commie.

lazyViking@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 07:45 collapse

This is completely normal for verifying age. Why are you acting like it’s some weird new concept?

BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today on 10 Dec 07:47 collapse

Do you actually believe this is about verifying age?

[deleted] on 11 Dec 01:25 collapse
.
lmmarsano@lemmynsfw.com on 10 Dec 01:50 next collapse

While the world owes Australia a debt of gratitude for banning their youth, banning all Australians would be better for everyone.

cv_octavio@piefed.ca on 10 Dec 02:14 next collapse

I mean, I am 100% pro-freedom of access and speech and all, but tbf anything that super murders social media is a net positive to the world at this point, until it’s less harmful and addictive.

_stranger_@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 21:09 collapse

no social media.

less harmful.

addictive.

Australia.

I’ve seen this before

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/ba5f9039-e200-45cf-9aa5-9ecf044dcfb2.gif">

Jumuta@sh.itjust.works on 10 Dec 02:18 next collapse

have a look at who proposed this change and you’ll see why it’s being done. it’s clear as day that this isn’t a win for anyone on the internet in Australia

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 04:18 next collapse

This is a wildly popular measure in Australia.

Jumuta@sh.itjust.works on 10 Dec 07:26 next collapse

not around me

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 09:26 collapse

Are you 12?

Jumuta@sh.itjust.works on 10 Dec 10:53 collapse

are you 11?

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 12:19 collapse

No.

PokerChips@programming.dev on 10 Dec 08:11 next collapse

This adds an extra layer of entry into the competition and ensures the big boys stay on top.

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 09:26 next collapse

On the contrary.

Loads of new platforms have sprung up with are not listed amongst those required to implement age verification.

Yes, any which become successful will be required to implement age verification but… they will already be successful.

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 10 Dec 16:17 collapse

AFAIK only big platforms are required to take measures, so it’s actually the opposite of what you said. it shifts power to smaller platforms who don’t have to comply with these rules.

PokerChips@programming.dev on 10 Dec 22:28 collapse

I do agree with you… for now. But this is just the beginning.

And to be fair, I do believe something has to change. However, we’ll find out in 10 years if this is the can of worms we really wanted to open.

Hopefully, the open source community and the “competitive commons” will make strides faster than the oligarchs can suffocate it.

dantheclamman@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 15:21 collapse

Popular doesn’t mean just.

Ibuthyr@lemmy.wtf on 10 Dec 17:34 collapse

Yeah, they should have banned social media completely instead.

Jumuta@sh.itjust.works on 11 Dec 03:20 collapse

social media does have its benefits though, like the democratisation of the press.

I’m of the opinion that simply banning advertisements outright destroys the incentive structure that exists to keep social media bad

Trainguyrom@reddthat.com on 11 Dec 14:26 collapse

Banning advertisements to kids is the correct approach. I’ve observed with my own kids, they genuinely don’t yet have the mental faculties to be critical of advertisements. They see something advertised, they want it, simple as that. Their brains aren’t developed enough for content with advertising nor product placement.

Maybe there’s a sweet spot in limiting it to toy ads and ads for other content on the same platform that they’re watching. I’m not sure, I’m not a child psychologist, but kids should not be presented ads for energy drinks/drink supplements (I wish I was kidding but I’ve specifically had to have a conversation with my daughter about why we’re not buying the drink band owned by a certain YouTube celebrity who got himself banned from returning to Japan) nor for restaurants (especially not fast food!) nor for sketchy paid mod launchers for games (fuck you to the like only YouTuber who focuses entirely on Wobbly Life and is constantly advertising that!), nor most of the other things I’ve seen advertised to the kids recently

CaptainBlinky@lemmy.myserv.one on 10 Dec 02:43 next collapse

in 20 years Australia will be the source of all nobel prize winners :D

ABetterTomorrow@sh.itjust.works on 10 Dec 02:49 next collapse

Nice

Montreal_Metro@lemmy.ca on 10 Dec 03:03 next collapse

Good. Time to consume quality media.

demizerone@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 03:15 next collapse

This needs to happen in america.

Mannimarco@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 05:58 collapse

Yeah?, are you willing to let these companies gather even more data by making it mandatory for EVERYONE to submit a face scan or ID for age verification?

SleepyPie@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 05:12 next collapse

Great!

sonofearth@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 06:34 next collapse

Although I agree that children should not be using social media at all, banning is not the solution. It should be for the parents to let their children use social media or not and if they should be using smartphones at all. If I were a parent I would give my kid a dumb phone just to call and sms (and maybe play snake). If they were to go on a trip, I would give a smartphone without any Appstore — just a dumb phone with parental restrictions, secure messenger like Signal (even Whatsapp if needed) to allow keep in touch with us and friends and any coordinators on that trip. If they were to use social media, it would only be on a Linux PC/Laptop.

filcuk@lemmy.zip on 10 Dec 06:41 next collapse

This results in segregation and bullying.

sonofearth@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 07:13 collapse

I mean there are other social activities — Sports, Reading clubs, etc. It is not as if the world didn’t socialize before social media. Bullying is not a new problem. Kids should be comfortable enough with their parents to share (which social media addiction doesn’t allow) that they are being bullied and not with random stranger online who doesn’t give a fuck anyways.

filcuk@lemmy.zip on 10 Dec 19:56 collapse

I think you misunderstood. If I, as a parent, don’t buy my kid a phone and block them from socials, other kids may be less likely to include them in their groups, activities and messages.
We see that today with the ‘blue bubble’ iOS people not wanting to talk to android users.
Yes, it’s very stupid, but kids can be cruel in ways they don’t realise.

So rather than potentially causing issues between my children and their friends, noone can access socials, which makes a level playing field. Noone can be left out if noone takes part.

That’s what I would hope for this to achieve, anyway.

sonofearth@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 03:11 collapse

The other kids with socials will be more likely to have mental health issues than the kid who doesn’t even if they get excluded from that group. There will be other group of kids with no socials as well. They will always find a tribe.

I don’t know about the west, but Indian schools don’t allow phones to be carried at all in their backpacks or pockets so maybe that’s why I might not know how serious this issue of isolation is in the west but in India it won’t be an issue because schools are 4-7 hrs long and after that parents usually send the kids to daycare, private tuitions, sports group, or any other hobby coaching that the kid is interested in. But some parents are absolutely stupid — they just give toddlers a phone or a pad just so they won’t have the hear the toddler crying.

fodor@lemmy.zip on 10 Dec 06:57 next collapse

Yeah, but at some point they will and then they’ll have to deal with all of the problems without anyone to help them manage the challenges. So either you parent them now or you just set them up to fail later. Take your pick.

sonofearth@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 07:23 collapse

Pretty vague but let me make the best out of it. I’d rather prefer my kids to physically explore the world and socialize rather than forming opinions of it and the society through an echo chamber on a 6 inch screen. It is more setting up to be a better human being (if not successful) than a failure. Most of social media is nothing more than following your favorite creators. Staying in contact with your friends is as easy as asking for their number or their home address so they can actually talk and socialize — you absolutely don’t need social media for it (you will only need, at most, Instant Messaging apps).

supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz on 10 Dec 19:49 collapse

Pretty vague but let me make the best out of it. I’d rather prefer my kids to physically explore the world and socialize rather than forming opinions of it and the society through an echo chamber on a 6 inch screen.

So by this logic you don’t like your kids spending too much time reading books either?

sonofearth@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 02:50 collapse

You are assuming that kids read stuff on the Internet. They don’t (and even if they do, it is very little). Most of their screen time is social media or games.

you don’t like your kids spending too much time reading books?

Tue to some extent. Doing just one activity for a long time even if you love it is not good for developing your brain and the body as a kid. Even though they might not want to, I would encourage them to do more stuff as a parent.

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 09:35 collapse

It should be for the parents to let their children use social media or not

The issue is, parents who do not want to let their children use social media have really lost the battle because every other kid is on social media. So if even if a parent stands their ground on a strict “no social” policy, their kid is an outcast.

With this law, even though some kids will still be on social, parents are empowered to hold the line.

Spitefire@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 13:41 collapse

This is exactly the purpose. I am largely against banning things but it’s SOCIAL media. Parents who want to make the objectively correct decision for their child have to go up against the zeitgeist and risk complete isolation of their kids in exchange.

RonniePickering@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 06:50 next collapse

Ban it all, its a plague on civilization!

DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.works on 10 Dec 09:43 next collapse

Ham Radio Time

wabafee@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 10:10 collapse

Damn kids with their hunky dory gadgetry them should touch grass and live outdoors like good ol days /s

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 06:57 next collapse

As long as social media’s goals are commercial and have the effect of “digital cocaine”, keeping kids and adolescents out of it should be the default, worldwide.

floquant@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 09:08 next collapse

all her 14 to 15-year-old friends have been age verified as 18 by Snapchat

I love how this sentence is just casually sprinkled there. So platforms are getting $50m fines if they do not implement “age verification”, but no problem if they fail to identify minors as such? Tells you everything about how they really care about protecting children.

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 09:32 next collapse

That’s not how the law is structured.

Sites are required to implement reasonable measures.

If kids are being evaluated as 18, with no additional checks, that’s not reasonable and they’re risking the penalties.

We’re going to find out whether the regulator has much appetite to issue those penalties, but we will see I guess.

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 10 Dec 16:14 collapse

but no problem if they fail to identify minors as such?

it’s a new technology. it will probably take years to figure out how to do age-verification properly.

floquant@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 17:29 collapse

Or, hear me out, let’s not waste time developing useless and harmful surveillance technology.

None of this is required to safeguard children, and it does a bad job in its attempt - while doing a great job of scanning every user’s face and documents.

Parents should be responsible, educated and empowered with tools to control their kids’ activities online. Networks and mobile devices can relatively easily be configured to restrict and monitor activity, especially for young children where you might want to choose what to allow, rather than to block. There will be ways around them, but if that 1% is motivated enough and knows they shouldn’t, I think that’s fine.

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 10 Dec 20:50 collapse

it will probably take years to figure out how to do age-verification properly.

yeah, what i actually meant with this was that it will take years for platforms to figure out how to do age-verification properly without infringing on the privacy of its users.

not because it is complicated, but because it is a societal process and these are always slow as hell.

Adderbox76@lemmy.ca on 10 Dec 15:28 next collapse

Since she had been identified as under 16, they feared “her friends will keep using Snapchat to talk and organise social events and she will be left out”.

FFS, we all got along just fine and dandy with group-chats via text message. We weren’t fucking cavemen.

The fact that this is her fear (and the fact that it’s a legitimate fear) proves just how much controls like this are needed. It’s literally digital crack that they think there’s simply no other way to communicate anymore (both her and her friends)

faythofdragons@slrpnk.net on 10 Dec 19:51 collapse

FFS, we all got along just fine and dandy with group-chats via text message.

No we didn’t. You run into nothing but trouble if you’ve got a mix of iPhones and Android in the group. It’s a nightmare and I wish the family chat would pick a different platform.

Adderbox76@lemmy.ca on 10 Dec 23:02 collapse

I’m talking about when I was a teenager. Neither iPhone nor android was a thing. I’m talking dumb phones

comalnik@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 15:33 next collapse

“One parent said their daughter was completely addicted to social media” Well then fucking take away her phone. Get her a dumb phone. Install parental controls. Go to a therapist if yo have to. But nooooo the government has got to do everything for us incompetent fucks

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 10 Dec 15:36 next collapse

I had this issue with a 15 year old. Phone gone, just an analog flippy, put in parental controls to prevent loading brain rot apps.

He’s happier for it.

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 10 Dec 16:13 next collapse

Get her a dumb phone. Install parental controls.

If this actually worked. I tried it once and it did not work at all. Platforms/apps don’t seem to respect the device settings at all.

kuhli@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 10 Dec 18:17 collapse

You can block apps or give them a time limit

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 10 Dec 20:49 collapse

block apps

block all 150000000 apps on the app store?

manwichmakesameal@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 21:32 collapse

Yes. You can enable password requirements to install them. iOS at least, don’t know about Android.

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 11 Dec 02:45 next collapse

can i also block developer options and apk sideloading?

Inkstainthebat@pawb.social on 11 Dec 08:40 next collapse

That’s not really a thing on iOS, and if they figure that out anyways then enjoy the arms race

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 11 Dec 13:45 collapse

and if they [children] figure that out anyways then enjoy the arms race

yeah that’s what i was talking about in my previous comment. today, there’s no simple way to just enable “parental control” on an android phone.

and i’m not paying these stupid overpriced apple phones, no way.

Trainguyrom@reddthat.com on 11 Dec 14:09 collapse

The way I see it, if my kids start finding ways to circumvent parental controls we should be able to have some frank discussions about what the parental controls would be setup for

[deleted] on 11 Dec 23:43 collapse
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Trainguyrom@reddthat.com on 11 Dec 13:59 collapse

I setup my wife’s old Android phone to be super locked down via parental controls. Only approved apps, no installing apps, time limited etc. set it up so my kids can use it on days when we need them to zombify for a bit in the afternoons

Its kinda mind blowing how YouTube Kids is their go to and they don’t move to any other apps until they’ve run out of time on it (family had already let the cat out of the bag about the existence of YouTube so I had to limit rather than block) and we still have had to block a number of concerning channels they kept watching. Its crazy how they’ll just zombify staring at YouTube but then for the age appropriate games they’re so much more engaged and actually seem to have a healthier interaction. Its also sad how some of the content I see the kids watching on YouTube Kids has writing and direction about on par with Disney’s current crop of age appropriate shoes for 3-6 year olds (and from what I’ve seen Nickelodeon isn’t much better right now). My kids primarily watch PBS Kids and a handful of shows we carefully selected on DVD because we want to minimize the brain rot (as well as minimize annoyance for us)

MyMindIsLikeAnOcean@piefed.world on 10 Dec 22:10 next collapse

This is a solution for people who don’t need a solution because they’re already great parents.

The vast majority of parents aren’t going to take their kids’ phones away.

YeahIgotskills2@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 06:39 collapse

Absolutely. My kids are 11 and 9 and some of their friends have phones. I might provide a dumb phone when they’re a bit older, but if they want a smartphone they’ll.have to wait until they get a job and buy one.

k0e3@lemmy.ca on 10 Dec 15:56 next collapse

My heart aches for them. Truly.

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 10 Dec 16:12 next collapse

One parent told the Guardian their 15-year-old daughter was “very distressed” because “all her 14 to 15-year-old friends have been age verified as 18 by Snapchat”. Since she had been identified as under 16, they feared “her friends will keep using Snapchat to talk and organise social events and she will be left out”.

I think the ban should only apply to public-facing platforms, where everybody can see your content.

Platforms where you only talk to your friends should maybe be left out of it.

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 10 Dec 16:22 next collapse

I would like to say that this is good for the quality of content on social media as well…

There’s less bullshit content on social media if there’s fewer kids, and also there’s less incentive for other people to create bullshit content for teenagers to consume, if there’s fewer teenagers on the platforms in the first place.

rumba@lemmy.zip on 10 Dec 19:04 collapse

If all the kids crap was removed from youtube, they wouldn’t have to worry about adding for storage for a decade.

MehBlah@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 19:08 next collapse

Just going to teach those kids its okay to break the law.

samus12345@sh.itjust.works on 10 Dec 19:21 collapse

A lesson that is not incorrect. Depends on the law.

arc99@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 20:06 next collapse

Make it a world wide ban to the age of 80

PumpkinSkink@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 21:38 collapse

That’d be an effective total ban, because noone would want to be on a social media platform with entierly 80+ year olds. It’d be all corny minion memes.

wondrous_strange@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 20:16 next collapse

Instead of punishing these cancerous cess pool manipulative platforms, they punish the kids.

The youth deserves to be able to communicate and use the web the same as the rest of the population.

Regulations should be such that these platforms are neutral, non manipulative safe spaces where people can come together share content and discussions.

The overall stupidity of decision makers is incomprehensible to me. Literal shit sacks politicians that should all be thrown into a hole.

Beat of luck youth, my heart is with you. Hope Lemmy will be the answer(or some other decentralized platform)

Jamablaya@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 20:56 next collapse

It’s Australia, been heading in a fascist direction for the longest time, and people think it’s fine because it’s institutionalized direction, not a orange clown lead occurrence

wondrous_strange@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 11:00 collapse

Seems like the same story all around the world. Scary shit

teslasaur@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 21:28 next collapse

They enforce laws that would punish the platforms if they dont abide by them. In what way are they not punishing the platform?

There will be other platforms and kids that deserve to be able to communicate will figure it out.

All i have to say about the ban is “fucking finally”. Cant wait for it to be enforced in Europe.

wondrous_strange@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 11:03 collapse

50mil for a company like meta is chump change, and it is not proportional to being a teen in today’s world locked out of all main communication hubs.

Youth are not the ones who need to ‘figure it out’. Massive companies, market leaders and decisions makers should, but they are all trash.

Its a sensationalist solution that will surely backfire, it only address symptoms while ignoring the underlying many many problems.

Very short sighted

teslasaur@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 11:25 collapse

It is for the people to understand not to use such garbage, yes. If they cant figure it out, there is always text and phones.

If it’s chump change, then why are they adhering to the new rules? There is something that you seem to have missed. You don’t seem to understand the manipulation that the social media companies are capable of, which is why rules are needed.

wondrous_strange@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 22:39 collapse

It is for the people to understand not to use such garbage, yes. If they cant figure it out, there is always text and phones.

You contradict yourself. So the ban is not needed? You were saying it’s up to the youths to find alternatives.

What I was saying that these platforms are toxic, they have a destructive affect on all, and we all deserve something better.

A government ban never worked on anything and jts the stupidest and laziest of all options.

teslasaur@lemmy.world on 12 Dec 07:34 collapse

If they cant figure out how to use other communication alternatives, they don’t deserve to use them. I can see how i fudged my words.

kossa@feddit.org on 11 Dec 06:39 next collapse

I agree that the ban is not good regulation. However, that some kind of regulation of those platforms get started is hopefully a milestone which gets the stone rolling. I consider those good news because of that.

I am cynically enough that I doubt that regulators around the world will learn and adapt, like I would wish for, but one can hope.

wondrous_strange@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 11:04 collapse

As I said, we all deserve safe online spaces, especially the youth but not only. I’m failing to see how this is the road to that.

aceshigh@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 15:18 collapse

But how will the sites make money? Will someone please think of the lost profit!!!??

eli@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 20:51 next collapse

They should just ban social media in general. There’s zero reason for it to exist and it’s been a detriment to society since it’s inception. Like cigarettes, zero purpose other than addiction.

Jajcus@sh.itjust.works on 10 Dec 21:26 next collapse

“Social media” ban would include also lemmy, that you are using to write your comment.

sin_free_for_00_days@sopuli.xyz on 11 Dec 02:11 collapse

Yes.

NikkiDimes@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 21:41 collapse

Well, bye I guess lol.

dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 21:19 next collapse

Parents of children affected by the ban shared a spectrum of views on the policy. One parent told the Guardian their 15-year-old daughter was “very distressed” because “all her 14 to 15-year-old friends have been age verified as 18 by Snapchat”. Since she had been identified as under 16, they feared “her friends will keep using Snapchat to talk and organise social events and she will be left out”.

Okay, that’s really bad. On the one hand, this is like “they don’t even card me at the bar”, which is opening up a whole can of worms. Either they’re passing for older, or they’re faking it. As for the kids left behind, it’s also “you look too much like a kid to hang” or they simply get left out for not breaking the rules. All this kind of shit used to happen before, only now it’s technologically accelerated.

And here I was naively thinking this was going to make everyone stampede back to SMS instead.

SoftestSapphic@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 21:24 next collapse

I wonder if after a few years we can stop pretending like social media caused every bad problem in society and instead we can focus on the wealth inequality and climate change apathy that is causing people to no longer want to support our broken society?

Jhex@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 22:03 next collapse

hmm I thikk a lot of the apathy you speak of comes from social media influencing youth

teuniac_@lemmy.world on 10 Dec 22:37 next collapse

Populism increases where people get better access to the internet. This is surprisingly well established because it’s easy to measure.

Of course wealth inequality and climate change are the bigger issues, but social media gets people to believe it’s actually minority groups behind the effects of these issues.

DylanMc6@lemmy.ml on 11 Dec 06:50 collapse

australia should really became a socialist country. seriously!

douglasg14b@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 00:05 next collapse

We’re not pretending, this is an asinine view.

Two things can be true at once. It’s surprising how difficult a concept this is to grasp.

Social media accelerated this, it provides the vehicle in which to make culture wars the only thing at the front of people’s minds. It accelerated division and hate, as these improve platform attention.

Let’s not even talk about the death of critical thinking which just allows this to happen to greater effect.

Rising wealth inequality because a side effect of us not fighting a class war which is a side effect of us being completely focused on culture wars which is a side effect of social media.

There’s an entire chain here and social media underpins most of it’s acceleration

SoftestSapphic@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 00:17 collapse

Cool

We’ll see in a few years if it was phones that made kids disinterested in society instead of society.

My money is on society being shit, and when I ask kids why they feel the way they do it’s because society is shit, but let’s not listen and keep pretending

king_comrade@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 06:13 collapse

Agreed man, kids feel hopeless cos they genuinely don’t see a future for themselves and they understand they will never achieve the same level of success or comfort that their parents did. Like, sure social media is shit but the ban feels like people pearl clutching instead of actually reckoning with why the youth in Australia is growing up so troubled. It starts with having a conversation with u18s instead of dictating to them. IMO? Lower the voting age to 14 and create a youth parliament. If we genuinely believe in democracy should we not expand it to include everyone our laws affect?

[deleted] on 11 Dec 06:03 collapse
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bstix@feddit.dk on 10 Dec 21:56 next collapse

So I guess the kids are gonna go to the dark web. What could go wrong.

I will look forward to Darth Musk throwing a tantrum against Australia when they eventually fine X for not complying, but that’s about the only good thing to come from this ban.

Oh yes sure, it’s great they stop the kids from being brainwashed by the algorithms. They really should ban everyone, especially the elderly.

kossa@feddit.org on 11 Dec 06:41 collapse

Yep, I hope they fine the shit out of Musk and looking forward to his take that Australia must be dissolved and, idk, given back to its natives.

MyMindIsLikeAnOcean@piefed.world on 10 Dec 22:09 next collapse

I don’t get it. This “ban” is going to last days or hours before the kids just find an app that does’t check their age.

It also will allow the big platforms to drop any pretence that their users need to be protected and take the gloves off with their algorithms to increase engagement to replace the kids.

sin_free_for_00_days@sopuli.xyz on 11 Dec 02:15 next collapse

Maybe (OK, this won’t happen, but I like to imagine it would), someone will figure out how to use one of the hundreds of chat programs that are out there, github or wherever, and get that going. Still able to be social with their group, without having all the bullshit social decline that comes from using the big chat platforms.

CircaV@lemmy.ca on 11 Dec 02:59 next collapse

Children lost access to social media? And nothing of value was lost.

finitebanjo@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 03:12 next collapse

No offence, children, but this is great news.

conorab@lemmy.conorab.com on 11 Dec 05:37 next collapse

Discord isn’t covered by the ban surprisingly enough despite being one of the platform more ripe for exploitation. I get that you’d want kids to be able to DM each other and voice chat but Discord is closer to a forum than it is to say, Signal.

Wouldn’t be surprised if it ended up on the ban list later on.

Henson@feddit.dk on 11 Dec 05:49 next collapse

On the other hand in Discord there is not an algorithm to feed you contet, so you have much more control of what you see/read, it does not leads you to the extremes

conorab@lemmy.conorab.com on 11 Dec 05:57 collapse

Oh absolutely! The ban makes far more sense as an algorithm ban rather than a social media ban and to the extent that you’re curtailing various mental issues that come with comparing yourself to others and being fed a narrative that is a good thing, versus banning interaction among friends. That doesn’t at all excuse the ban of course. It’s bad and to an extent doesn’t even target the core of the issue: you are still being fed this information whether you have an account or not. You don’t need an account to watch Tiktok, YouTube or Reddit. The issues of the algorithm are still very much there, it’s just that <16s can’t post/comment anymore.

C1pher@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 06:01 collapse

Its not about the “kids” or safety, but to know who keeps shitting on the govt online and spreading… “undesirable thoughts”.

Naturalhealer@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 06:46 collapse

You just nailed it. I will also add this will lead to digital ID for everyone unless people resist. Slippery slope for those unaware of the NWO.

[deleted] on 11 Dec 05:59 next collapse
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DylanMc6@lemmy.ml on 11 Dec 06:50 next collapse

australia should become a socialist country. seriously!

Fleur_@aussie.zone on 11 Dec 13:23 next collapse

Dw guys we’ve tested it and it’s a certified bad idea. You’re welcome

Doomsider@lemmy.world on 11 Dec 15:36 collapse

That is a lot of drug addicts to cut off at once.