| ▲ | pyuser583 a day ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I say this again and again in various places - something wise needs to be done about children and the internet. Previous interventions have failed miserably. I think the solution is giving parents maximum power: create an immutable record of browsing history - down to the request/response; and, if desired, white listing at ISP account level. I’ve had to deal with a child seeking out toxic materials - although fortunately not the kind discussed here. Conventional blocking software fails because the worst parts aren’t bad domains but mixed domains - Reddit, for example. If you’re going to enact laws, enact laws that require mixed domains to not frustrate blocking software - Reddit does this. If it detects a blocker it throws up a fake subreddit, so you have no idea what your kid tried to access. Messaging is fairly easy to manage - delete the messaging apps. Also the immutability and white listing would do great things there too. But when the domain spitting out toxic content is Google Classroom - there’s nothing you can do. I don’t want to dig on this too hard, but safe harbor rules probably shouldn’t apply when the content comes from or to minors. The idea behind safe harbor is to effectively route lawsuits to the person who created the content, not to the platform hosting it. But if it’s routing legal liability to a minor who cannot be sued - that doesn’t seem effective. Also consumer protection laws that require companies that offer child protection features to have some kind of liability if they are merely performative. Many companies will stop offering, which is fine, because a failing system is far worse than no system. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | Bjartr a day ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
One thing I've seen discussed that throws a wrinkle in all of this is the question of whether or not a parent can have control over what their kid can see when they're at a friend's house, and if the answer is no, does that mean something more global like mandatory age verification is necessary to ensure they are still protected. The argument I've seen goes that even if a parent has complete control over what is available on their home network and on their children's devices, the fact that another parent in their children's friend group does not enforce the same means in practice the amount of control a parent can exert on this problem is effectively zero and a higher-level approach to eradicate this loophole is necessary. I don't think I agree with that, but that's the strongest case I've come across for implementing such policies. What I think it really calls for though is a solution in the space of community and communication rather than direct governmental intervention. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | soulofmischief a day ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
This increasingly popular take comes across as a generational rung-pulling exercise. We pine for the 80s and 90s of unbridled freedom, lament that a 7 year old boy can't go out walking by himself in the neighborhood anymore without his parents going to jail, and then talk about "toxic materials" by saying things like "create an immutable record of browsing history - down to the request/response", as if that's not a preposterously toxic environment in which to raise a kid, for a plethora of reasons. I was raised in that environment. It was but one aspect of my abusive upbringing, but a key one; the internet represented free information, which is dangerous to a child one is attempting to religiously indoctrinate. I can tell you now, it is a horrible way to raise a child, leads to zero trust and if anything, encourages antisocial, subversive behaviors. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | moi2388 a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> I say this again and again in various places - something wise needs to be done about children and the internet. There already is. It’s called parenting. If your child cannot handle the internet, do not give him access to it. If your child can only handle supervised internet, only allow it from the home pc. If your kid, like quite some children, is perfectly capable of navigating the internet and talking about worrisome content they encounter, give them a personal device. This sounds like the parents who are shocked that their kid does criminal stuff, but let him or her be on the streets till midnight without any supervision. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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