alecco a day ago

(repost)

  - Let's limit children's use of social media and screens.
  - Great! Let's do it.
  - We need to identify who is 18+, so here's your digital ID for everything. And, from now on, if you ever criticize the government you will lose your bank account and your job.
  - WTF!
  - That "WTF" just cost you 100 social credits.
UK, EU, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and next USA. It's amazing how coordinated it is. They are using dog-whistles like CSAM, immigration, crime, and now children's wellbeing.
  • tgv a day ago

    It's bloody obvious how damaging social media, especially on mobile devices, is to everyone's mental state. Check out what teachers have to say about the attention span of the current generation pupils. But no, your access to whatever it is you're addicted to is more important.

    Anyway, the government can already take away your bank account. No need for them to introduce such a complex scheme.

    • potato3732842 6 hours ago

      Great example of what "hapless enabler" looks like.

      We all agree there's a problem. But simply letting the .gov do whatever it finds convenient will likely not solve the problem any better than any other option, and will likely make a whole bunch of other things way worse.

      But that's fine because it's for the children, right?

    • alecco a day ago

      > It's bloody obvious how damaging social media, especially on mobile devices, is to everyone's mental state.

      Agree. A simple solution would be to regulate social media by forcing a maximum time per user per day or banning it altogether. But that's clearly not the agenda. (same with all the other dog-whistles).

      > Anyway, the government can already take away your bank account. No need for them to introduce such a complex scheme.

      But currently they can't match anonymous social media profiles to IDs or bank accounts. This is why they want a mandatory "Digital ID" for social media.

      • LexiMax a day ago

        The fact that this discussion seems to revolving around a single axis of limiting social media time and mandatory identification is such a farce.

        When I was growing up, I had very limited access to real life social spaces that I actually enjoyed participating in. Online communities were my respite, the light in the darkness that honestly kept me alive until I managed to make it to college. If there was an overbearing nanny state preventing me from knowing that there was a better life waiting for me after grade school, I'm not sure I would've bothered to stick around until then.

        That said, most of modern social media isn't the same as the online communities I and many others grew up on. It's a free for all with very thin walls between social spaces, almost no human oversight, and run by the most despicable and immoral people on God's green earth. So I am inclined to agree with the people who say that kind of social media is a bad influence and should be curtailed.

        But even today, that isn't everything that's on the internet these days. Discord especially has quietly become the socialization hub of most of the younger folks I know of, and a large part of that is because it allows the creation of private, invite-only groups moderated by actual people. As far as I'm concerned, the Internet needs more Discords and fewer Twitters and Instagrams. There shouldn't be an arbitrary limit on socialization, but socializing should be...social, not some weird performance art done in front of the entire internet.

        • potato3732842 6 hours ago

          >It's a free for all with very thin walls between social spaces, almost no human oversight, and run by the most despicable and immoral people on God's green earth. So I am inclined to agree with the people who say that kind of social media is a bad influence and should be curtailed.

          It was the same in the past. The difference is that the house odds were different. You didn't have algorithms cramming the worst of the worst down your feed, forums, IRC, message boards and the like weren't built with the goal of maximizing engagement. Heck, even vote based communities which inevitably turn into low common denominator groupthink producing cesspits are mild compared to modern stuff.

        • engineer_22 a day ago

          Frankly, the law should be "you can sue social media if you can link their service to a problem with you'r child's mental health"

          then let the courts decide. they'll clean up their act pretty quick when lawsuits come pouring in, and it removes the central govt's role in USER ID's and other 1984 schemes.

          • LexiMax a day ago

            > Frankly, the law should be "you can sue social media if you can link their service to a problem with you'r child's mental health"

            So you want to make it legally viable for religious parents to sue social spaces that allow for their children to question the religion of their parents? That's totally something that I could picture happening under such a regime. And that's ultimately indicative of a larger conundrum we face as a society.

            The fact that as a society we seem to favor giving parents the ability to make their children in their own image, over giving their children the leeway to figure out who they truly are outside of their parent's guidance. And that's a truly difficult line to tack. Sometimes the parents are 100% right and the children would self-destruct under their own supervision. Other times, the children are being abused and tortured for not following the whims of their selfish parents.

            I was lucky, all things considered. My parents were well meaning, just extremely overbearing and micro-managing. Some of the outright abuse that some of my acquaintances describe undergoing would make y'all sick if repeated here. I don't know if there's any solution, but I'm not sure giving helicopter parents more leverage against social spaces is the right play.

            • abraae 17 hours ago

              > So you want to make it legally viable for religious parents to sue social spaces that allow for their children to question the religion of their parents?

              Why not. In a court of law, and facts, such lawsuits would only serve to highlight that religion is not a real thing. That would be a good thing for the world.

    • epolanski a day ago

      Why are we focusing on pupils? Attention span in general has degraded, I see it on myself and my family too and we're all between 32 and 60.

      The only person that hasn't degraded is my grandma as the only internet feature she uses are video calls.

    • pyuser583 17 hours ago

      I don’t think this is obvious - I have kids and this is a constant battle. If you take the devices away they are along and isolated and it’s so much worse.

      Some schools have these rules, but unless they are practically enforced, kids get around it.

      I worry these laws will result in the worse of both worlds.

      We need really well moderated forums for kids, along with practical bans for everything else.

      I’m not sure how that happens.

      • lisbbb 16 hours ago

        I'm 52 and I'm alone and isolated, so age has very little to do with any of it. There is no reason to pass laws to solve what technology caused and technology will undo or we will go extinct and it won't even matter anyways.

    • cbdevidal a day ago

      They can, but digital passports and ID makes it far easier. Notice that even though government can do it now they are still pushing for these.

      “It’s for the children” is the siren song of tyranny.

    • roenxi 14 hours ago

      If it were bloody obvious the government wouldn't need to be involved, parents would find a way to get their children off social media. And there are much gentler solutions than a ban that should be explored first (like letting households volunteer themselves to be IP-banned by social networks, for example).

      • red-iron-pine an hour ago

        the largest companies in the world have their core profit motive tied to getting you to engage in social media.

        asking households to voluntarily leave is like asking people not to get fat -- ain't gonna work, esp. when mega corporations want you to consume consume consume.

        it needs to be a law, and it needs to be enforced.

      • wseqyrku 14 hours ago

        > parents would find a way to get their children off social media.

        They wouldn't have a clue. Hell, I personally had this addiction for a long time and it just takes too long to see what a horrible experience it is in the long term. You can argue you should be able to do whatever you want at any age, I'm not the person to say anything about that.

        But I totally agree that, as other comments point out, they use it as a justification for all sort of surveillance, I don't really think it is necessary to go that hard because whoever want to get access, they will. It's the internet after all.

    • ikamm a day ago

      Yes let's take away everyone's privacy because parents can't be bothered to parent.

      • epolanski a day ago

        I doubt that parenting can do much here.

        I've read that after elementary school parents have an incredibly small impact on their children's development, peers and their environment (which includes virtual one), has virtually all of the impact on your children's development.

        • iowemoretohim a day ago

          Do children buy devices and pay for internet service?

          • epolanski a day ago

            Good luck denying your 12 year olds a smartphone when every single of their friends has one and they are cut off from everything.

            • s777 20 hours ago

              My parents gave me really shitty smartphones that were barely powerful enough to do important things but was an awful experience for Instagram/games/etc until I bought a better one with my own money (similar specs to Pinephone Pro)

        • jack_tripper a day ago

          How so? Parents and schools can collectively decide to take away the smartphones of preschoolers if keeping them safe and focused was the main priority. Like how else is a preschooler gonna get a smartphone without adult money and support? Last time I checked preschoolers can't open a checking account and a credit card.

          This bs of government forcing everyone in the country to have to doxx themselves just so preschoolers can't access social media(which they will anyway since rebellious children are very resourceful on cheating the system made by tech illiterate adults), is like if prehistoric humanity were to stop using fire just because the village idiot burned his house down.

          • floren a day ago

            > Parents and schools can collectively decide to take away the smartphones of preschoolers if keeping them safe and focused was the main priority

            Collective action? Like some sort of communist? No THANK you!

          • ForHackernews 5 hours ago

            If only there were some kind of collective larger than a family or a school that could decide to take away social media from impressionable children...

            • jack_tripper an hour ago

              Yes, and how would the government ban social media apps from preschoolers without forcing everyone to doxx themselves to prove age?

              Your sarcastic jab doesn't add any new questions or answers to this very important issue, since everyone can agree social media is bad for kids, but also we don't want to lose internet anonymity just because schools and parents can't raise kids without giving them a smartphone in hand since birth.

      • retsibsi a day ago

        Let's suppose the cause really is as simple as "parents can't be bothered to parent". By default, this will continue to be the case. And realistically we're not going to fix it by telling bad parents to please start being good parents. So what do you actually want to do? I'm not saying it's this or nothing, but if you don't have an alternative policy that might actually help, I don't take much comfort in the idea that the kids who are damaged will have _parents_ who totally deserved it.

        • lapcat a day ago

          There are some alternative policies, for example, banning smartphones in schools. This doesn't completely solve the problem, of course, but at least it limits social media use while the children are under direct supervision of the government.

          A more extreme policy would be to treat smartphones themselves the same way we treat alcohol and cigarettes, enforcing an age minimum at the point of purchase. Of course the giant tech corporations would fly into rage over this suggestion and lobby heavily against it.

    • TitaRusell 10 hours ago

      Pretty much every doctor agrees alcohol is bad for developing brains. But science doesn't always win against society.

      • pfyra 9 hours ago

        Is there any place without an age limit for alcohol?

        • graemep 7 hours ago

          In terms of private consumption, effectively so. The UK limit for consumption at home is five. I have no idea how even that can be enforced.

    • liveoneggs 6 hours ago

      Boots taste good, actually! +10 social credit for you!

    • riskable a day ago

      Yes, but damaging adults is OK. It's only children that must not be damaged.

      • barbazoo a day ago

        Adults are expected to think for themselves. Kids need help because they don’t have the experience yet.

        • epolanski a day ago

          If society and parents ban you from something and they do it themselves then the ban has virtually no effect.

          • kolektiv a day ago

            It's why we see so many infants getting caught for DUIs. Seriously? You seem to be implying that there's no justification/efficacy for any law/ban prohibiting children from engaging in adult activities. That's... something.

          • barbazoo a day ago

            That’s right and important to keep in mind.

    • superkuh a day ago

      >It's bloody obvious how damaging social media, especially on mobile devices, is to everyone's mental state.

      It's not though. That's just the popular meme among easily influenced and excitable social groups (like parents). It's not reflective of reality. The idea that mobile devices are somehow damaging to mental state is not supported by scientific studies. Nor is the idea that online discussion forums and markets are.

      What is dangerous is mis-using medical terms like "addiction" in apparently an intended medical context. When you start throwing around words like addiction governments get really excited about their ability to use force and start hurting and imprisoning people. Even murdering them. Multi-media screens are not addictive. There is no evidence supporting such assertions in reputable scientific journals.

      • epolanski a day ago

        What are you talking about there's an overabundance of studies that links social media consumption with degrading mental health. Especially for youth.

        Here's a review (a paper that collects results of many other papers) from 2022:

        https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9052033

        • superkuh 7 hours ago

          > the term of problematic use characterizes individuals who experience addiction-like symptoms as a result of their social media use. Problematic social media use reflects a non–substance related disorder by which detrimental effects occur as a result of preoccupation and compulsion to excessively engage in social media platforms despite negative consequences.

          This study is taking "problematic social media use" as it's implicit given and then from this arbitrary base it is then saying this small subset of problematic people experience depression because of the fiat declaration of "problematic".

          But then it goes on,

          >While there exists no official diagnostic term or measurement, Andreassen et al [17] developed the Facebook Addiction Scale, which measures features of substance use disorder such as salience, tolerance, preoccupation, impaired role performance, loss of control, and withdrawal, to systematically score problematic Facebook use.

          Which isn't even a real journal article but instead a comment in a non-research paper which hasn't ever even been cited by anyone else until this paper. https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C29&q=Dev... https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22662404/

          This is not real science. This is anti-facebook political manipulation via science sounding words. I'm plenty anti-facebook myself but I am very pro-science so it's sad to see this successfully masquerading as real science.

        • qcnguy a day ago

          By link you mean correlate, which doesn't mean anything.

          Social studies are useless anyway. Academic social studies are so biased that anything they say on the matter should be discarded. They will always produce "evidence" on demand for whatever the left want to do.

          Social media should be left alone. Parents who want to can block it on their children's devices. There's nothing more that needs to be done.

    • SilverElfin 18 hours ago

      Why shouldn’t parents mind their own children? Why limit everyone’s speech?

      • abraae 17 hours ago

        Do you have kids?

        It's much easier to say to a child "you can't have a social media account, it's the law because experts have determined it's not healthy at your age" than "your mother and I think that social media is bad for you".

        • DaSHacka 7 hours ago

          Whether it's the rules of the parents, or the "rules" of the government, they're all the same in the eyes of a child.

          source: was once a child

        • amanaplanacanal 9 hours ago

          Whether experts have determined it's not healthy is independent from whether it's against the law.

        • pyuser583 16 hours ago

          I tried that before they were 13. Technically false, but almost no social media company allows under 13s.

          It didn’t work very well.

    • hearsathought a day ago

      [flagged]

      • slumberlust a day ago

        Your insults weaken your argument and detract from the overall conversation. Aim higher.

        The don't tread on me angle is just as overplayed as the one you're complaining about.

  • retsibsi a day ago

    > And, from now on, if you ever criticize the government you will lose your bank account and your job.

    We could have a real conversation about tradeoffs (and maybe this one isn't worth it!) but not if you just assume/pretend the worst-case scenario is real. I'm Australian and I'll happily bet that N years from now I'll still be able to criticize the government without being debanked or sacked.

    If we do ever fall to authoritarianism, I doubt this will have been a crucial step; it's already easy for the government to deanonymize most posters if it wants to, and an evil future government that wanted to go further could probably just... do it, regardless of precedent.

    • janice1999 a day ago

      > but not if you just assume/pretend the worst-case scenario is real

      Just want to point out that Canada weaponised war time powers to debank truckers protesting during COVID. The rubicon has already been crossed. While I didn't support their cause, the writing is on the wall about what governments want to be able to do to people it finds inconvenient.

    • jajuuka a day ago

      Governments never give up power. They will only take more. So considerations on what power should be given over should be done carefully instead of having knee jerk reactions based on "think of the children".

      • retsibsi a day ago

        It's my impression that the shift from 'basically normal government' to 'authoritarian nightmare', when it happens, tends to happen quite abruptly rather than via the ratchet effect/frog-boiling. And there seem to be plenty of examples of democracies that have remained basically normal despite decades' worth of policies that libertarian-leaning observers would decry as the thin end of the wedge. I'm open to being convinced that the risk of a policy like this clearly outweighs its benefits, but I think I need a specific causal pathway and/or historical precedent rather than general arguments.

        • jajuuka a day ago

          The US is kind of an obvious example of this ratchet effect. The powers that have been given to the executive over the course of decades and consistent moving to the right for decades has led us to where we are now. Similar cases in Russia and China where more power is handed over to a centralized leadership role over time.

          I'm not a libertarian or follow the thin end of the wedge belief system. It's a simple observation that governments operate under the idea of growth of power. That is not to say an absence of government or reduction of government is good or better. But to recognize our role in maintain the social contract with the government. Abdicating that role entirely does not improve your life.

          The only benefit of this legislation is that VPN's will get a bump in revenue, the web becomes more unusable and critical information gets stored at third parties who become high value targets for hacking. Not to mention these data brokers can easily turn around and begin to monetize this data. I'm not a privacy nut by any measure, but this seems like the most obvious major hit to personal data privacy. Instead of addressing the problem that is being claimed to be resolved, it's just lining another corporations pockets who will sell your data. We've seen this story play out many many times already. but you think this time will be different? I don't think so.

  • jmathai a day ago

    I don't have the solution. But it seems like a problem which needs to be addressed and regulation isn't a crazy place to look. As a parent, it feels like I'm constantly battling with Meta, Tiktok and Google over my childrens' development and we have very different goals.

    • phantasmish a day ago

      Lack of something like SSO and centrally-managed permissions for families is a huge pain in the ass.

      Minecraft is notably insane due to this. I don’t know how normies get their kids playing online with it (ours is locked down to just-with-friends, and we gatekeep the friend list), I thought it was hard as a techie. Cross-platform play (outside of X-Box, I suppose) requires creating and carefully-massaging permissions on two overlapping but unrelated systems, both the account on the console itself and a Microsoft account (and their UI for managing this is, in modern Microsoft fashion, entirely nutty). Then, if anything goes wrong, the error messages are careful never to tell you which account’s settings blocked an action, so you get to guess. Fun!

      (Getting “classic” Java Minecraft working, just with a local server, was even harder)

      Your options are to go all-in on one or two ecosystems; to take on just a fuckload of work getting it all set up nicely and maintaining that with a half-dozen accounts per kid or whatever; or to give up.

      Then schools send chromebooks home with less-restrictive settings than I’d use if I were managing it and no way for me to tighten those, and a kid stays up all night playing shovelware free Web games before we realize we need to account for those devices before bed time. Thanks for the extra work, assholes.

      • sethammons 4 hours ago

        sso for the family :mindblown:. Tie this in with a real ID validation tool, and then integrating systems only know "is/is not allowed" and the parents can mind all the kid's stuff.

    • lapcat a day ago

      Why not just take away their phone?

      • phantasmish a day ago

        iPhones have excellent parental controls (by the abysmal standards of consumer software more broadly). You can just not allow insta and such, or set time limits on them per-day (30 minutes, say). I assume Android has something similar. You can set the Web to allowlist-only. Kids can send requests to bypass limits, sends the request right to your own Apple devices, easy to yay or nay it. It’s damn good.

        Phones are among the easiest devices to manage.

        • jmathai a day ago

          Found out last year that simply deleting an app and reinstalling it will reset time limits.

          • phantasmish a day ago

            App deletion and installation were among the first things I disabled :-)

        • lapcat a day ago

          > iPhones have excellent parental controls

          If those work, sure, although kids tend to be pretty clever about getting around parental controls and are sometimes quite a bit more technically sophisticated than their parents.

          • phantasmish a day ago

            It ain’t the ‘90s and this ain’t Windows 95 with bypassable-by-accident OS account logins and half-assed website blocking made by the lowest bidder. Getting past app installation restrictions and time limits on iOS would be… challenging.

            It sucks as a parent because you get this from both ends: “parent better! (Putting in tons of work that our parents didn’t have to)” and also “lol what are you doing restricting kids on computers is impossible, give up you idiot”.

            (And on some platforms it is, for practical purposes, impossible—looking at you, Linux, not just because it’s a powerful open platform but because its permissions and capabilities system is decades behind the state-of-the-art and tools for sensibly managing any of that on a scale smaller than “fleet of servers” and in the context of user-session applications are nonexistent)

            • hellojesus a day ago

              To that extent can't kids just pop in a live USB and get a totally ephemeral and open os?

              I'd push the implementation to the router and force root certs on devices and have all clients run through your proxy or drop the packets. That way even live usbs will not get network access. Have some separate, hugely locked down network for kids' friends.

              Maybe put a separate honeypot network up with some iot devices on it with wifi and a weak password, and let the kids have some freedom once they figure out how to deauth and grab the bash upon reconnections.

              Idk. I'm some years away from this problem myself,but someone recommended this in another thread recently.

              https://wiki.squid-cache.org/Features/SslBump

              • DaSHacka 7 hours ago

                > To that extent can't kids just pop in a live USB and get a totally ephemeral and open os?

                That's a lot more difficult if you leave secureboot enabled on the computer. Plus, most devices, especially newer ones, allow you to pin your own certificates and sometimes even disable the OEM certs.

                That, in addition with locking the BIOS with a password (and if the device does not have known OEM override passwords like on bios-pw.org), should be more than enough to keep a kid out.

            • lapcat a day ago

              > It sucks as a parent because you get this from both ends: “parent better! (Putting in tons of work that our parents didn’t have to)” and also “lol what are you doing restricting kids on computers is impossible, give up you idiot”.

              I didn't claim that it's impossible, merely that it's difficult sometimes, as you also implied ("putting in tons of work"). The advantage of physically consfiscating phones is that it's a low tech, brute force method available even to the least technically sophisticated parents.

              • jmathai a day ago

                heh...see my comment above about bypassing screen time limits on ios by simply deleting and reinstalling the app.

      • jmathai a day ago

        I'm not sure if you're asking as a parent or an observer of parents. But it's not such a clear option given how entrenched we've made devices into children's lives.

        My son's cross country team communicates via GroupMe and it's very difficult for him to stay up-to-date with the web version from a laptop. My daughter's friend group communicates via snapchat.

        This doesn't mean parents have to allow everything. My daughter doesn't have Snapchat, for example. But there are definite tradeoffs like her being left out of many conversations and slowly getting excluded from friend groups as a result.

        It's too much unnecessary complexity added to parenting and the motivation being profit by mega corps is why I suggest regulation is a valid place to start looking.

        • lapcat a day ago

          > I'm not sure if you're asking as a parent or an observer of parents. But it's not such a clear option given how entrenched we've made devices into children's lives.

          It doesn't have to be a 24 hour a day ban. A kid could be limited to an hour a day or phone use or something like that.

          > It's too much unnecessary complexity added to parenting and the motivation being profit by mega corps is why I suggest regulation is a valid place to start looking.

          The inevitable result would seem to be that all adults, parents or not, would be forced to present their identification online to use the internet. I think that's too much personal freedom to sacrifice, regardless of how noble the goal.

          • jmathai a day ago

            > It doesn't have to be a 24 hour a day ban.

            Limits help, for sure. But it's like setting limits for addictive products like "one cigarette a day". It's better than a pack a day but the impact addictive products have on kids don't stop once their limit is up.

            > I think that's too much personal freedom to sacrifice

            That's why I started by saying I don't have the solution. Regulation and fines for companies that target kids feels plausible. While not exactly the same, we curbed teen cigarette use by imposing marketing restrictions and issuing fines to tobacco companies (and drastically reduced adult smoking too for that matter).

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_smoking_bans_in_the_Un...

  • dilawar a day ago

    Can't zero knowledge proof solve this problem?

    Submit a zkp that you are over 18 to the website that requires it. The proof need not be tied to the identity of the user.

    I personally don't think self-regulation works. It's harmful so the next best option is the government regulating it.

    • carry_bit a day ago

      Problem? That's the intended result.

    • bootsmann 9 hours ago

      This is how the eu standard for digital ID works already, the above post is uninformed fearmongering.

    • mikkupikku a day ago

      Doesn't matter if they can, because that's not how any of the shot callers want it done.

  • atonse 4 hours ago

    We like to pretend that this is something new. Before free porn on the internet, what did people do?

    - They bought porn from stores (no anonymity)

    - They rented porn from hotel rooms

    - They paid for it on pay per view channels (how many kids growing up in the 90s remember watching the fuzzy scrambled Spice channel and trying to make out a boob somewhere in the garbled picture?)

    - They went to movie theaters for porn! I've never actually seen this but have read about it.

    NONE of those actions are anonymous. They're even documented and associated with real identities.

    If you're telling me that somehow adding some kind of verifiable age gates to things like porn (and social media) will lead to authoritarianism, we don't have to theorize. We ran this experiment already. And nobody had issues with it, realistically.

    We're still running this experiment. If you try to watch an R rated movie in a theater, they will likely ask you for ID if you're clearly under 17. They used to do that to me growing up.

    The current state of "Kids can access all this without any protection at any time" is abnormal. It's NOT normal.

    We can all have a reasonable conversation here without always bringing in the authoritarianism boogeyman.

  • everdrive a day ago

    This is probably controversial, but this reason I would much rather things like social media and pornography be outright banned rather than age-gated.

    • frm88 16 hours ago

      That would have severe economical impact, so nobody dares to go there which is why all these salami tactic solutions are being thrown around. Personally, I think your suggestion has merit, since we can observe that not only children's mental health is severely impacted. Another advantage I see with this is that clear lines allow for clear enforcement that would then get a lot less expensive. I mean, the overabundance of malicious ads should also go into this pot. Another idea would be to put social media companies under strict rules and compel them to install human moderators to enforce them, think dang or tomhow.

      Edit: it works on HN (rule wise and moderation wise), so it could work on other platforms, too. Of course that would be expensive for the companies, but frankly, the companies are causing the current upset, so why not place the cost with the ones causing it instead of impacting everyone and even socialising the fallout like lawsuits.

  • Aunche a day ago

    > And, from now on, if you ever criticize the government you will lose your bank account and your job.

    When has this happened in the countries you listed?

    • pjc50 11 hours ago

      The Canada trucker COVID protests are the standard example.

      • azernik 7 hours ago

        They did a bit more than "criticize the government".

      • DaSHacka 7 hours ago

        Man, just imagine the pushback if Trump did something like that now. The word "facist" would be in the headlines for months.

        "Oh, but it was 'our team' so it's different."

        whatever

  • rayiner 7 hours ago

    Better to just heavily tax social media like we tax other harmful things like cigarettes. Heavily tax advertising while we're at it, too.

    • sethammons 4 hours ago

      can you describe how this tax would work?

  • duxup 21 hours ago

    Also in the meantime kids find their way to other sites / work around and they claim to be adults so now ... NO PROTECTIONS for the kids ...

    Completely the opposite of what you would hope.

  • CamperBob2 a day ago

    Also Rahm Emanuel: "Let's take Second Amendment rights away from everybody on the no-fly list." [1,2]

    1: https://www.nationalreview.com/2021/03/rahm-emanuel-hey-lets...

    2: https://old.reddit.com/r/reddit.com/comments/816qf/rahm_eman...

    • pjc50 11 hours ago

      The harm from guns is far, far clearer, and they are far less essential or relevant to daily life, especially for young adults.

      Also the US is basically the only country which sees lethality as a "right".

      • CamperBob2 4 hours ago

        The harm from unaccountable governments who treat their constitutions like suggestions is far greater still, though. It's not about the guns, it's about the list. If you're an American who's not outraged by Emanuel's statement -- on guns or on social media for that matter -- it's because you feel privilege that you may not actually possess.

        On that subject, it's certainly a strange time to argue for government's role as the holder of a monopoly on the tools of violence, isn't it? The human consequences of this misguided philosophy ran well into eight figures in the 20th century alone.

        In any case... say what you will about the US, we won't shoot you at the border for trying to leave.

  • boringg a day ago

    Why are you lumping Canada into that group? Only UK and AUS are doing the digital ID.

  • ForHackernews 7 hours ago

    We already ban children under 13. I think that's a good thing and the age limit should be 16 or 17.

    The rest of your comment is a non sequitur.

    • zarzavat 7 hours ago

      It's a good thing that children under the age of 12 don't know how to use checkboxes!

      • ForHackernews 5 hours ago

        Luckily the Australian law is written such that tech companies can't get away with a checkbox.

  • someNameIG a day ago

    An an Australian, the social media ban legislation specifically requires than non-ID methods be available (it specifically says that also included digital ID).

  • barbazoo a day ago

    Children’s welbeeing being a dog whistle? You should go out and talk to real parents and teachers in the real world.

  • biophysboy a day ago

    This is a speculative, intuitive reflex meant to derail an argument.

  • jack_tripper a day ago

    > It's amazing how coordinated it is.

    It's not really "amazing" at all, when you consider that the working class in those countries has finally woken up to the fact that their biggest present day issues, like housing unaffordability and low purchasing power, have been caused by the intentional fiscal policies of their governments over the last 30+ years, instead of the usual boogeymen (Xi Jinping, Putin, Covid, immigrants, etc).

    And now after 20+ years of constantly vote hopping between left and right, hoping "this time it will be better than last time" but in practice it always ended up worse, the people are trying to hold them accountable for it, so the elite are switching tactics now that the ye olde reliable tactic of gaslighting the people doesn't work anymore.

    If the carrot doesn't work anymore, time to move over to using the stick to keep the peasants in line.

    • barbazoo a day ago

      There’s no evidence about this being coordinated is there?

      • jack_tripper a day ago

        What?

        • barbazoo a day ago

          Coordinated

          • jack_tripper a day ago

            When you put all the points on a graph and they form a line, what more "evidence" do you need?

            Your request for evidence reminds me when the 3 telco operators in my country raised their prices simultaneously on the same day, and the nation's anti cartel watchdog said they found no evidence of price fixing lol

            Just because the system is corrupt, incompetent or ineffective at finding evidence, doesn't mean there isn't collusion going on.

            • graemep 6 hours ago

              You do not need collusion for people with similar aims and interests who look at each other for precedents to behave in the same way.

  • mvdtnz a day ago

    Sorry what do you think is happening in New Zealand?

  • insane_dreamer a day ago

    Meh, the gov can do this already. The effect of social media on our kids is a bigger evil at this point.

  • stephenr 16 hours ago

    I would suggest that anyone who says modern social media isn't damaging to people in general, but particularly young people, either (a) has never used it; or (b) is being deliberately disingenuous.

    From that point I would view social media essentially like alcohol.

    As an adult you can choose to (ab)use it if you wish, but it's arguably the government's responsibility to protect children at large from social dangers like this.

    It's absolutely a thing that people are asked to prove their age to buy alcohol, or even to enter a licensed venue that serves alcohol. I don't think I've ever heard anyone except underage teenagers complain about the invasion of privacy to hand over your ID for beer/etc.

    Does the implementation around safe proof of age need work? Probably. Does that mean the whole thing is a not-so-subtle attempt to fire you for swearing?

    I don't fucking think so mate.

    People are already fired for saying stupid shit on social media, they're already debanked for being out-and-proud White Supremacists.

    Given the current political situation in the USA and how it got there, if you have any illusions of a continuing democracy, you should be champing at the bit for anything which reduces social media use.

    • graemep 6 hours ago

      > It's absolutely a thing that people are asked to prove their age to buy alcohol, or even to enter a licensed venue that serves alcohol. I don't think I've ever heard anyone except underage teenagers complain about the invasion of privacy to hand over your ID for beer/etc.

      If they reported verifying my ID to the government every time I bought a drink I would complain about invasion of privacy.

MarkMarine a day ago

I lucked out in when I was born, I developed before social media existed and my college was a later addition to Facebook. I think it just doesn’t affect me in the same way… like someone who has never won a dollar gambling looks at a gambling addict. I’ve got tremendous empathy for the people that are addicted to it and I can’t imagine how corrosive it would have been to my teen years, so much as I revile the politics behind Rahm who believes nothing and will stick his finger in the wind every few minutes and go where it takes him, I’m glad this is the way the winds are blowing. Social Media should be regulated like alcohol and cigarettes and drugs. All addictive, all tuned to hit dopamine centers, all bad for our health in different ways.

  • nullbound a day ago

    I feel the same way. In a sense, our parents had it easier in terms of the damage external world could do emotionally, because there was typically a simple way to prevent most of it. Now, it is not nearly as simple. Not to search very far, our kid has a media diet that some consider strict ( 30 minutes a day of pre-selected items if kid meets some criteria, which I still consider too high ). But then some kids already have cellphones, ipads ( some completely unlocked too ! ). I only recently gave my kid lappy with gcompris installed ( locked down lappy; no net access ). Point I am trying to make in my rambly way is that each parent is hodge podge of various choices. And it does not work in aggregate.

    I get that it is all about balance, but it is hard to disagree with Rahm here. Top down ban is the only real way to go.

    • rozap a day ago

      > Point I am trying to make in my rambly way is that each parent is hodge podge of various choices. And it does not work in aggregate.

      On top of that, you have some of the biggest, most moneyed companies in the country spending billions of dollars to get kids and adults hooked. Even for parents with good intentions, it's not a fair fight.

      Maybe I'm going off the deep end, but I sometimes think people that work at Facebook should be considered social pariahs. The amount of damage that company has done to our country and society is truly incalculable. It's really hard for me to forgive anyone who had any part in it.

  • lesuorac a day ago

    I think playing a ton of games as a kid has helped me.

    I walk through a casino and see all the flashing lights and sounds and like the casino screen is half as busy as an RTS. It's just not the same level of engagement; it's not overwhelming, it's just slow.

  • logankeenan 18 hours ago

    How would we effectively regulate social media? Being the regulator could be a very powerful political tool and used to capture or maintain political power.

    • MarkMarine 16 hours ago

      Regulating is already being done by the “private” companies that own them, heck it’s the plot of a bond movie (sub in newspapers for social media) with a real life Larry, Elon or Mark as the villain.

      As a society we choose what to allow or not allow together, collectively, through politics (ideally) and when things damage our collective health we regulate or ban them. All regulations probably seem impossible before they happen. Australia regulated guns, China regulated social media, plenty of countries regulate alcohol, drugs, gambling. It’s all possible, just have to weigh the positives and negatives and find a balance, but the status quo is broken.

      • propaganja 11 hours ago

        Deciding what we want as a society is fine. Vehemently disagreeing over what and how things should be regulated is fine too. In general, trying to do anything in good faith is more or less fine.

        What is not fine is proposing to make regulations that purport to do things that are near-universally supported, but in reality further agendas that are widely opposed, agendas that work against the interests of the American people and would never pass otherwise.

        That is very clearly what is happening here, and we know that because it happens all the time, using the same tried-and-true formula. In particular, anything claiming to "protect the children" is almost certainly an obfuscated attempt to erode civil rights protections like free speech or privacy, and should be treated with extreme prejudice.

        *edit* Also, anything Rahm Emmanuel says, believe the exact opposite.

        • MarkMarine 5 hours ago

          I agree with the sentiment, but the rights of Americans are being eroded at a comical rate with no positives like protecting children (be that an allusion to protecting them or actually doing it)

          Look at the TikTok “ban” for example. Congress passed a law to ban it because they didn’t have control over what the population was seeing, specifically around the genocide in Gaza. Now US ownership has passed to Larry Ellison, a republican connected pro-Zionist that will make sure the objectionable content that shows Palestinian's suffering does not bubble up in the algorithm. Never mind that you see 10 year old girls practicing TikTok dances when they are standing in line, waiting for the bus, etc. That problem persists, and no one in leadership cares because now the right people are getting rich and censoring the actual content the rulers cared about.

          I’m with you on Rahm, but I’m not going to let him trying to hook his wagon to a policy that I support ruin my support of it.

mikewarot 6 hours ago

I will never forgive Rahm and his sacrifice of socialized medicine on the offering pyre of the insurance companies.

Nothing he wants is to be considered a good idea by default. He typifies everything wrong with the DNC.

  • nielsbot 4 hours ago

    Don’t worry, we have Abundance now

  • giraffe_lady 5 hours ago

    He was also directly involved in the chicago police department's attempted coverup of the murder of laquan mcdonald. He is completely despicable, the idea that anyone is covering his policy ideas is fucking vile. He should be begging for prison.

flpm a day ago

Social media is not the same product as social networks. It had value when you were in control of what content you wanted to see (your friends' posts).

Now social media, controlled by algorithms, is just like a permanent informercial. You have direct ads and first level indirect adds (sponsored content), but it goes deeper than that, when they manage set up a "viral trend" you have a lot of people acting as speaker person for brands without even realizing.

Attention shapes who you will become in the future, because it focus on what matters to you. When you outsource that to others, they can mold you into what is more profitable to them. Specially kids, who are at the prime time for being influenced.

  • ergocoder 17 hours ago

    Then, people would complain it was an echo chamber because you only followed people who were aligned with you...

  • daveguy a day ago

    This is a good point. I completely relate to the statement that "social media is a plague on society." But you have a good point -- it's not so much the digitization of a social network as the algorithms that are hyper-optimized to steal attention and sell advertising. Maybe it's not the age that should be regulated, but the algorithm. Whether algorithm regulation should be age dependent is another question. Personally I don't think it should be age dependent. Or... Dear Social Media Companies, F your attention hijacking, skinnerbox advertising and engagement crack regardless of how old your victim is.

sajithdilshan a day ago

This is the exact policing we don't want government to do regardless of the age. In my opinion it's the responsibility of the parents to decide how to raise their children and teach them how to live and adapt in the age of social media and maintain a balance.

In the same sense one could argue that social media like Facebook or WhatsApp should be banned among older population because that's one of the major ways mis/fake information being spread among elderly people and now with AI videos they actually believe those fake stories to be 100% true as well. I think that's more risk to modern day democracy and well being of the society in general.

  • ekjhgkejhgk 7 hours ago

    > This is the exact policing we don't want government to do regardless of the age. In my opinion it's the responsibility of the parents to decide how to raise their children and teach them how to live and adapt in the age of social media and maintain a balance.

    It's complicated. I can decide how to raise my child when he's inside the house. But if when he goes into the world he's sorrounded by people addicted to their phones, what do you think it's going to happen?

    • jajuuka 4 hours ago

      The same way parents of previous generations dealt with it. Whether it was phones, tv's, drugs, etc. Helicopter parenting is not the solution and not an effective method to produce well adjusted adults. You have to equip children with the tools to respond to different scenarios. Not prevent from ever knowing other things exist.

      • ekjhgkejhgk 3 hours ago

        Absolute garbage.

        A) Forbidding your children something does not equate to helicopter parenting. You're attacking someone else's position.

        B) Forbidding your children something DOES WORK as long as that thing is not easily accessible. That's why we make certain things illegal to sell to children, so that their rate of usage is lower than otherwise.

  • insane_dreamer a day ago

    Stores are banned from selling cigarettes to those under 18. Sure, kids can still get them, but it does present a barrier.

    I don't see this as being any different, and as a parent, I'd support a ban like that.

    • stronglikedan a day ago

      Cigarettes (nicotine products) are easy to identify. What is social media? Why would I want to acquire and provide an ID just to comment on HN? In the case of social media, there is not a well enough defined product to ban.

      • hananova 6 hours ago

        Big tech has had decades to self-police, and I don’t believe for a second they didn’t know that at some point they would be forced to if they didn’t do so.

        This is just the adults in the room drawing the line.

    • themafia 11 hours ago

      Which was only done federally _after_ strenuous public efforts to prove they were harmful to _everyone_.

      Good luck.

    • sajithdilshan a day ago

      That's the whole point then right? It's whole another policing and maintenance burden created to be funded by tax payers money without actually achieving anything useful at all.

      • insane_dreamer a day ago

        Do you have kids? I'm glad mine can't just walk into a store and buy cigarettes. It's a pretty strong deterrent.

    • squigz 13 hours ago

      I'm really sick of this silly comparison.

      Stores don't require you to present an ID to enter them. They don't record that ID, add it to a pile of other data they've collected about you, and sell that information. In short, the privacy concerns are vastly different.

      Furthermore, nicotine products are much more easily defined than social media, as another commenter points out.

      • amanaplanacanal 9 hours ago

        Perhaps it could be made illegal for companies to use your data that way, the same way your health data is protected. I could get behind that effort.

OptionOfT a day ago

These platforms exist for one reason: data collection, used to sell ads.

Once you realize their perverse nature where they walk the line of barely useful vs maximizing income, using the application starts to feel icky.

But sadly that knowledge only comes with age and experience.

tlogan a day ago

So let me this straight. I will need an ID to go on internet but not to vote. He even talked about how requiring ID makes thar certain people are trapped in vicious cycle.

This is the exact policing we don't want government to do - but it is to protect children. So I guess we will go with it.

  • nielsbot 4 hours ago

    Yes. The stakes of getting it wrong are different. Social media ≠ voting.

sackfield a day ago

What are the metrics this Australian law should hit? How do we know its achieving its intended result?

  • lil-lugger 16 hours ago

    They have a panel who are reviewing it’s effects across all aspects of teen life including sleep patterns, school grades ect and then nationally test results ect

    • sackfield 9 hours ago

      Can you provide more information on this? I can't seem to find any.

  • ninalanyon a day ago

    Almost no laws are enacted with this in mind. The people doing it are neither scientists nor engineers and never suffer any consequences for failure of what most people will see as well meaning lawmaking. The idea that a law should be subject to quality control is not merely absent but also anathema.

delichon a day ago

On the question of whether to legislate the ban, I'm a no. On the question of whether parents should implement it, I'm a yes. My niece and her husband have a one year old that is allowed zero screen time. They are willing and able to forego the high tech baby sitting, and are talking about continuing until at least the pre-teens. I think that if they could go even further, say live for the next decade with the Amish, it would be even better.

If a kid was raised with his family in a dome where no technology later than 1900 were permitted (perhaps with an emergency medicine exception) and the kid wasn't released into the world until 13, I think on average they'd be mentally healthier and have a happier life.

  • hefnstjetkegm a day ago

    That is extremely short-sighted to assume that because a few anecdotes on “how to parent” will fix the problem. I recommend you go out in public and observe the reality in various states and in various demographics and you’ll quickly see that the parents are just as addicted as the kids. They won’t know how to parent this away without legislation.

    Just go into the classroom and witness children and their six-seveeen.

    This is 100% like smoking except worse, because entire population of children are being deprived of their attention span. They just learn how to peddle useless products onto their peers without brain development to understand the consequence.

    • delichon a day ago

      I feel the same way about a smoking. I'm opposed to both smoking and a ban on smoking. It's not because I don't think an effective ban would be healthful, but because I believe that the concentrated power needed for it is a greater danger. It's the same argument that I believe supports the first amendment: people saying evil shitty false things is a lesser evil than the power needed to stop them from saying them.

      • hefnstjetkegm a day ago

        And suppose no one banned smoking, and smoking was still allowed on airplanes and most restaurants had smoking sections would we be better off? I’m sure all the people who died of throat cancer would tell you otherwise.

        • delichon a day ago

          Would you also prefer to repeal the first amendment? (If you are subject to it.)

          • hananova 6 hours ago

            That’s a non-sequitur.

  • jswelker a day ago

    Your niece and her husband are one in a thousand parents. Very few have the fortitude to do it. Not a good outlook for the future if we depend on the virtue of parents.

  • iamnothere a day ago

    I concur with this. I’d even be okay with government-sponsored PSAs about social media use as long as it’s based on sound research. But a ban is a hard no due to the First Amendment.

mrobot 16 hours ago

I Have Also Written Via Snail’s Courier To Make America Healthy Again That We USA Enact A Similar Ban But Also That We Should Start With The Adults Since The Children Seem More Mature Capable And Really Just Generally Cooler In On And Even Under The Internet

everdrive a day ago

I don't see advertisements often, but I had to fly for work recently and of course saw advertisements in the airport. One of the ads was for "Teen Instagram" with "automatic protections." Kind of depressing. It's a bit like someone selling teen cigarettes, they're a bit more mild and you can graduate to "adult cigarettes" when you're ready. I'm not sure government banning is solution, but there's clearly no good done by the existence of social media. It's a strange problem, and ultimately the issue is that people just cannot regulate their behavior in this area.

  • raddan a day ago

    > there's clearly no good done by the existence of social media.

    If this were true, I’m sure that you wouldn’t have any trouble advocating that we ban it. Many of us remember social media before the algorithmic feed took over, and it was a good way to stay connected to friends and family. Some us also were lucky enough to experience a protracted period of socializing on the internet in the pre-social media days: MUDs, web forums, chat rooms, etc. I enjoyed all of those, in my teen and college years, and like you I count myself fortunate that I was not exposed to social media during a formative time of my life. I think that’s why I hesitate to say that we should outright ban it: I know that the internet _can_ coexist (and even augment) a healthy social life. That said, I don’t use social media at all anymore (unless you count HN), so I’ve definitely voted with my eyeballs.

    • graemep 6 hours ago

      > If this were true, I’m sure that you wouldn’t have any trouble advocating that we ban it.

      I would be fine with a ban on social media as it exists. I think it has displaced a lot of things such as forms and chat rooms and a lot more.

      The internet can be good, but social media makes the internet worse.

    • quesera a day ago

      Some critical differences, I think, are:

      - What we did on the Internet in the early 90s was not broadcast to our (real world) peers. If some big drama blew up online, we could escape it with the flip of a switch.

      - Similarly, we could escape real world drama by shifting to our online relationships.

      - Normal people were not online yet, so you didn't have all the normal real world structures of authority and popularity/hostility. Or, you had substitutes instead, because this is human nature, but they were not so universal and entrenched. It was an Internet of niches, and we could all find or create our own.

      - There was no pervasive profitability goal in keeping our eyeballs on a particular platform, so today's dark pattern manipulation just didn't exist.

      - It was separate. Not only did the Internet not bleed into real life (and v-v), but it wasn't always-available like today with smartphone ubiquity.

      The Internet, back then, was a safe third space.

      Today it's often a toxic hellscape, with some exceptional corners.

      • everdrive a day ago

        Very well put. The internet used to be an island of sanity from the real world. Now, most of it, is far worse than the real world. Pockets of excellence exist, but you're always just one impulse control failure away from stumbling into outrageous or addicting content.

  • OptionOfT a day ago

    Yea I've seen those too. Made my heart sink.

    When you start to think about that statement, and why it was written there, why a company chooses to pay $ to tell you this, you know that inherently something went REALLY wrong in the past.

    And because it's a company, they're doing the bare minimum to fix it, as to minimize the impact on their bottom line.

    It reminds me of the ads against a certain prop in CA, the one that would make app workers (?) employees.

    Advertisements taken out by Lyft, Uber, etc, all to sway people.

    When companies want you to do something it's not in your best interest. It's in theirs.

  • iamnothere a day ago

    > there's clearly no good done by the existence of social media

    Citation needed.

    Look, I am greatly opposed to how US social media giants handle and monetize data, and I don’t like them having the level of control that they do. Antitrust is a great lever to use here, because concentration is the source of many problems. But banning what is in effect public social communications is a giant step over the First Amendment.

    People can and do use social media to their benefit, whether it’s for political organizing, whistleblowing, mutual aid, OSINT, or gathering on the ground media and first hand accounts from active events (such as conflicts, protests, or police actions) that may never show up in the news. The professional media cannot be everywhere, and sometimes they will not cover certain events. That’s what social media is good for, despite its flaws.

  • squigz 13 hours ago

    > there's clearly no good done by the existence of social media.

    I assume you apply this to HN as well? Discord? Forums?

    All of these can easily be defined as "social media"

  • multiplegeorges a day ago

    Your mention of cigarettes is apt.

    We will come to see social media in its current form the same way we view smoking.

xnx a day ago

I see social media ( x AI fakes) doing just as much or more harm to seniors.

  • ksynwa a day ago

    Yes. My parents happily drench themselves in a neverending barrage of unhinged political commentary on YouTube and watch clips on Facebook without knowing they are AI generated. It is really horrifying.

  • graemep 6 hours ago

    Adults of all ages are being harmed.

  • bamboozled a day ago

    Yes but they won’t let you take it away from them because they are hooked

    • broost3r a day ago

      they also vote

      • squigz 12 hours ago

        I used to laugh about the idea of kid's voting rights. As I get older, I'm not so sure it's a bad idea. They're the ones who have to grow up in the world we're shaping. Maybe they should have a voice in how it's shaped.

        And if anyone wants an idea of why, here's a clip from one of the best shows of all time, The West Wing

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hSDxg-bDw1A

tsoukase a day ago

- 1990s, blogs, months long

- 2000s, facebook, weeks long

- 2010s, twitter, days long

- 2020s, tiktok, minutes long

- 2030s, ???, seconds long

and our attention span, intelligence and socialising are compromised.

jswelker a day ago

Ban social media and go a step further and ban mobile devices for children while we're at it. The generation of iPad babies is completely broken. I kept my kids away from that stuff religiously, but now these brain addled goblins are their peers.

feb012025 20 hours ago

Coming from Rahm Emanuel of all people, I don't get the sense that this is just a good faith effort to help kids at school

euroderf 13 hours ago

Can't someone cook up a scheme where households with children need age verification for everyone, and households without children do not ?

OK, tear this idea apart...

jajuuka 4 hours ago

These policies are so shortsighted. What about youth who are disabled? Socializing online can a huge benefit for them and allow them to connect with other people who they might never meet. What about LGBT youth who live in oppressive environments? Having a community that accepts them boosts their own self worth and reduces the risks of harm. What about any marginalized youth? They may be in a situation where they are one of the only people like them in the are and the internet allows them to find other people like them and give them peace about their own identity.

This push for age verification is just a thinly veiled attempt to unmask everyone on the internet to open them up to harm and prevent connections from being made.

ls612 5 hours ago

It is unlikely that ID requirements for the internet would pass constitutional muster in the US. SCOTUS looks poorly on anything resembling a speech licensing regime.

andsoitis a day ago

> And he suggested lawmakers should start with targeting three of the most popular apps among U.S. teens — TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat.

The linked Pew Research article also lists YouTube up there. Why not restrict its use by teens as well? It is because it also has wholesome material?

HumblyTossed a day ago

We should ban voting aged people from using them.

ninalanyon a day ago

Surely any other country should wait a while to see what the effects are. It's already being challenged in Australia on free speech grounds.

  • tgv a day ago

    The effects are there for everyone to see. GenZ is depressed and can't hold a thought for more than a few seconds. No, it's not because of the housing or job market, it's the phones. Check e.g. Jonathan Haidt: https://jonathanhaidt.com/social-media/

    And free speech: you don't need a mobile phone or tiktok to exercise that right.

    • ninalanyon a day ago

      I was referring to the effects of the law.

hiddencost a day ago

I can't believe we're still talking about him. All he's done is fail.

game_the0ry a day ago

That's def and "ok, boomer" mentality. Apparently, Rahm has never heard of a "VPN."

Jokes aside, this should be the responsibility of parents, not the government. Also, this is about censorship, not protecting kids.

josefritzishere a day ago

Culturally, this is the pivotal question of our generation. Both options are admittedly terrible, and as appealing as the parental rights argument may be... it hasn't been going well.

jmclnx a day ago

Almost impossible to do, but I agree and have been saying that for decades.

Until recently I agreed with the age of 16, now I am starting to think they should be banned until they get an High School Diploma or equivalent, if no "diploma", then at the age of 21, they are allowed. Same as Drinking Age in the US.

The diploma requirement might decrease the dropout rate the the US.

petcat a day ago

Does the Democratic party actually have a platform capable of beating the incumbent Trump Republicans? Or is it just this kind of stuff? Ban kids from YouTube?

  • everdrive a day ago

    It's interesting, because quite a lot of the pornography ID laws are passed by Republicans and popular among Republicans. I don't mean this as a "both sides" sort of argument, but rather that modern tech seems to be unpopular among all constituents, even if different groups have their preferred villain.

    • VWWHFSfQ a day ago

      I feel like those laws are different because they specifically target pornography, which is seen as an evangelical moral sin. They would prefer to ban it completely, but that most likely runs afoul of the Constitution. So their next best bet is just to try to limit it to over-18s.

      Obviously the end result is the same, but I think the motivation is different.

      • everdrive a day ago

        >which is seen as an evangelical moral sin

        Maybe. Most of the debate that I hear feels similar to social media commentary -- teen boys getting their brains fried by constant access to stimulus. I don't hear anything about onanism or sinning.

        Mind you, I'm not saying they're right or wrong, but just that most of the arguments I hear are saying "we think this is an identifiable and secular harm."

      • watwut a day ago

        > They would prefer to ban it completely, but that most likely runs afoul of the Constitution. So their next best bet is just to try to limit it to over-18s.

        They dont care about constitution. And they are in position to reinterpret it however they want to, regardless of its text and meaning.

        • VWWHFSfQ a day ago

          If that was actually true then states would have banned or blocked already. This is not a new issue and it has been challenged unsuccessfully many times.

          • watwut a day ago

            That was before conservatives stopped caring about pretending they care about constitution.

            They dont really care about porn now tho.

  • spamizbad a day ago

    The good news is Emmanuel, although a media gadfly, isn't well liked by Democratic voters so he won't make it out of a Democratic primary.

  • energy123 a day ago

    It's popular in Australia according to polling even though you'd never guess that based on sampling opinions about it from social media.

    Credibly fixing both social media and cost of living would be an effective platform across the West.

    • chii a day ago

      > It's popular in Australia according to polling

      depends on how or who you poll. I dont think it is popular. It's just that there's a lot of stigma when you try to argue against "saving the children" type policy - which is why this gets used to pass laws that otherwise would be difficult to pass if the true intentions were revealed.

      > Credibly fixing

      "credibly" is carrying a lot of weight here.

      • energy123 16 hours ago

        The polls I've seen show banning social media for under 16s has 70-74% support in Australia and the UK, with about 20% opposed.

        What polls are you looking at?

  • mzajc a day ago

    > On March 12, 2025, Politico reported that Emanuel was interested in running for president in the 2028 U.S. presidential election.

    They are going to find out soon enough.

  • phantasmish a day ago

    The pitch of the centrist/“3rd way” wing that’s still, incredibly, ascendant even after the massive party shift on the other side that was teed up in the late ‘00s and realized in 2016, is basically “we’re just like Reagan but we like the gays and abortion a little more, and like guns a lot less”.

    It’s a shit message, but they’re apparently permanently damaged by the 1980 landslide re-election loss to Reagan and incapable of moving on. IDK if liberal democracy will survive here long enough for us to see if another wing of the party can ever get those folks to let them try something else.

    [edit] not for nothing, Obama lightly hinted at a move away from that in his campaigning (if not his governing) and it seemed to work pretty damn well. Why they didn’t double down on that is anyone’s guess, but I’d suppose it rhymes with “bobbying”.

    • devilbunny a day ago

      1984, not 1980, FWIW, and the Democratic Party old guard had been pretty badly beaten up by the 1968 and 1972 conventions. Tip O'Neill was one of the last of that group to really hold power.

      • phantasmish a day ago

        1980 was the famous almost-every-state-is-red presidential election map that scared democrats shitless and convinced (enough of) them the way forward was shifting much closer to Reagan on many issues (including, notably, joining the Republican neoliberal movement). But yeah it took an election cycle or two to stabilize after that.

        [edit] I mean yes 1984's map was even worse, but 1980's was reeeeeal bad. Six states won in 1980, versus one in 1984. And we have a guy who won a pretty ordinary split of states and less than a majority of votes-cast calling his win in 2024 a "landslide", lol. No, Reagan's elections are what a landslide looks like.

        [edit edit] I mean I don't really want to quibble over the details, it probably was the one-two punch of those that really set the direction and we seem to agree on the basics that it was Reagan's crushing electoral success that set the tone for Democrats for up until... well, still today, largely.

  • lesuorac a day ago

    Unfortunately yes.

    Trump won during a time where incumbents lost by ~10 points. He narrowly beat a candidate that lost their only primary run by <2 point.

    Trump's very vocal minority is very good at making people think there is a silent majority.

    However, the democrats have been elected quite a lot this millennium and they've fully shown they're incapable of making necessary reforms so there's going to keep being populist candidates until there's new blue blood.

  • iamnothere a day ago

    That would require making positive, pragmatic suggestions that could improve the lives of the average person, rather than moralizing and kowtowing to the special interest groups and wealthy donors who have captured the party. Good luck with that.

    As it is we now have two parties obsessed with “regulating” the morality of citizens while bleeding them out financially.

    • estearum a day ago

      No, it would require overcoming a shameless demagogue and enablers who have no problem blatantly lying about everything to everyone.

      Democracy has been known since its invention to be extremely vulnerable to such actors. It's vulnerable to it because it's nearly impossible to counter.

      Your critique is valid to some degree, but Trump won simply because he had the shamelessness to lie over and over and over again that he'd bring prices down. That's it.

      No "positive, pragmatic suggestions" are electorally stronger than simple untruths stated with confidence ad infinitum.

      • iamnothere a day ago

        Good luck with that. This was the message of the consultant class in 2016 and 2024 and it’s why Dems lost both of those elections. Biden, for all his flaws, actually did attempt to articulate and focus on a positive message and actively reached out to struggling workers. And he won.

        • estearum a day ago

          The message of the consultant class is that demagogues can win by just lying to people?

          Which consultants said that?

          Biden won because he came hot on the heels of Trump's complete inability to actually govern.

          Which specific pragmatic, positive visions did Biden put forth that are so distinct from Harris's that they won in one case and lost in another?

          • iamnothere a day ago

            No, the message was that winning was about “overcoming a shameless demagogue and enablers who have no problem blatantly lying about everything to everyone,” plus shallow pandering to diversity, rather than delivering tangible benefits to Americans. In both 2016 and 2024 the Dem message to voters was that everything was fine, no radical economic change was needed, vote against orange man and all would be well. This was a losing position against a populist. Biden called on his long record of support for labor and proposed investing in American manufacturing, which was a winner in swing states especially since the economy was hurting due to the pandemic.

            • estearum a day ago

              I didn't say that should be the message.

              I said that there's no "pragmatic, positive message" that overcomes simply lying and having an entire media and political apparatus that supports it.

              Biden's primary advantage was running against a guy who was demonstrably a complete shit show as an actual incumbent. That was memory-holed by the same shameless lying (e.g. ask Republicans who they think "locked people down" during COVID).

              Biden (and Harris) then had a similar disadvantage going into 2024.

              It's extremely, extremely silly to act like voters were looking for pragmatic messages lol. Simply no evidence for that.

              They were primarily looking to get rid of the incumbent, as was the trend across all democracies during a period of extreme inflation.

              • iamnothere a day ago

                That’s a common refrain, especially among the media (ironically, as they are blaming themselves) and the professional-managerial class, who seem to have a blind spot for labor needs. Voters facing hardship have agency and vote for who they believe is aligned with their needs. In 2020 Biden’s union support was key to his victory in the rust belt states, which carried him to victory. Harris didn’t have the same background and didn’t make a serious effort to reach those people, and lost a percentage of union votes at a time when the number of union voters actually increased. So she lost. But it’s true that inflation didn’t help.

                One reason that incumbents are doing so poorly is that they promise nothing, and deliver it. Nations are in decline across the West, and all that candidates are allowed to offer is more of the same neoliberal pablum. Anyone who attempts to offer something different faces a coordinated attack from the media and incumbent political class, and the only ones seemingly able to break through the resistance are dishonest right-populists. The left has to come up with a solution other than dismantling (excuse me, “fortifying”) democracy, which appears to be the EU solution.

                • estearum a day ago

                  Can you tell me which Trump policies were pro-labor, pro-union, pragmatic, positive visions of the future?

                  There was none.

                  It turns out that actually you don't need pragmatic, positive visions of the future to win. In fact, we have plenty of evidence that pragmatic policies at all are a massive electoral liability when facing someone who is, again, willing to simply lie about everything.

                  In Trump, you have clear evidence that people do not need pragmatic solutions to anything. Somehow you are pulling from that the conclusion that Democrats are not pragmatic enough.

                  What makes you believe there is public appetite for pragmatic solutions? Enough to win a national election?

                  • iamnothere a day ago

                    Trump does not offer real solutions, except as a sound bite in passing (to be later ignored). But in the absence of pragmatic policies that voters can get behind, the winner will always be the candidate who offers to tear down the system that has failed the people. Mark my words.

                    • estearum 18 hours ago

                      The reality is that sound bites have an intrinsic advantage over real solutions. Real solutions to complex problems are by their nature complex and uncertain (else the problem would've been solved already).

                      "Immigrants are the problem" or "I will bring prices down on day one" have a fundamental memetic advantage that, in a lazy and unengaged populace, will win in 100% of scenarios.

                      The real issue here is the GOP not holding themselves accountable to something better than suicidal demagoguery. The opposing party cannot prevent this from being successful. That's why it's a known, fundamental flaw of democracy.

                      • iamnothere 18 hours ago

                        It sounds like you’re in a real spot of trouble then. If there are no solutions available. Maybe you can double down on the 2016/2024 strategy again.

                        • estearum 9 hours ago

                          Again: you haven't actually provided any evidence of what the 2016/2024 strategy was, why 2020 was different, etc.

                          You're doing the far lazier, "ascribe all failures to the thing I do not like, and all successes to the thing I do like." Evidence should be trivial to produce but you cannot.

                          And yes, a major faction electing a demagogue is a real spot of trouble. It has been known as such literally since the invention of democracy.

                          It wouldn't be considered a known vulnerability because it's solved by "well just talk about a pragmatic, positive vision for the future!" lmao

                          • iamnothere 8 hours ago

                            The Atlantic summarizes the situation somewhat but with perhaps too much brevity: https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2025/10/democra...

                            Evidence: I was there, do your own research if you care so much. This isn’t a formal debate, and anyone who has eyes, ears, and a brain can figure it out.

                            You keep shouting demagogue, demagogue! As if anyone outside of the political class cares. Solve the people’s problems or there will be more (and worse) demagogues. It’s your only option.

                            • estearum 8 hours ago

                              We don't disagree that that's my (as someone on the anti-Trump side) only reasonable option.

                              Where we disagree is your assertion that that is the necessary and sufficient solution.

                              Those are entirely distinct claims.

                              People have won elections for a long long time without pragmatic solutions to real problems (case in point: 2024). You have basically zero evidence this is even a relevant point in elections whatsoever.

                              The actual necessary solution is entirely on the GOP's side. So long as they're in the throes of a cult of personality, then a sufficiently large part of the electorate will be immune to logic.

                              And yes: this is very bad. It is a deeply inconvenient fact, but the inconvenience of it does not render it less factual.

                              • iamnothere 7 hours ago

                                I don’t know what to tell you if you require research to explain that the intended function of the government is to serve the needs of the people, that this is the right thing to do, and that voters will respond positively if it looks like you will make an honest effort to do this.

                                It sounds like you would rather claim a lack of agency (it’s all up to the big bad Republicans) rather than even attempt to implement a pragmatic, common sense strategy. And this is why the Democratic Party finds itself rudderless.

                                • estearum 7 hours ago

                                  I don't know what to tell you if you don't think there's a divergence between what gets people put into power and what role they're supposed to play with that power. Again: we are currently living a live, empirical disproof of your position, as you have already acknowledged.

                                  > It sounds like you would rather claim a lack of agency (it’s all up to the big bad Republicans) rather than even attempt to implement a pragmatic, common sense strategy. And this is why the Democratic Party finds itself rudderless.

                                  Huh? No. It sounds like instead of reading the words in front of you, you're just arguing against the claims you want me to be making.

                                  Harris was a terrible candidate, we don't disagree there.

                                  Again: We disagree in your assertion that pragmatic policies on the oppositional side are all that's required to win against a demagogue.

                                  If that's true, please tell me why demagogues have long been known to be a real vulnerability in democracies?

                                  Answer directly: If that's all that's necessary, then why did the Founding Fathers even bother to write extensively on this problem?

                                  • iamnothere 6 hours ago

                                    > Again: We disagree in your assertion that pragmatic policies on the oppositional side are all that's required to win against a demagogue.

                                    I never said that this is the only thing you need. You need other things as well, including a modicum of charisma, a good network on the ground, and solid fundraising to support the efforts. And a party that won’t fight its own candidate after the primaries (oh, and you should actually hold a primary).

                                    Demagogues are a problem in every kind of government when the quality of governance declines. You just don’t often hear about it in dictatorships because the demagogues are either killed or they flee to another country. But demagogues are a sort of release valve for public frustration that’s grounded in material reality, and if you suppress their rise long enough then you eventually get a civil war, collapse, or revolution. The only solution is to fix the problems that lead people to seek out radical change.

                                    Anyway, it’s clear we’re talking past each other, I have no desire to continue this thread further.

  • steviedotboston a day ago

    banning kids from youtube seems pretty reasonable

zoeysmithe a day ago

Remember this guy was chased out of chicago for trying to cover up the murder of Laquan McDonald by the CPD. Then, previously was famous for being Clinton's fixer in the Gennifer Flowers case. The fact that this man has any political career at all is an incredible indictment of our system.

  • amanaplanacanal 9 hours ago

    It's not clear to me that he has any political career beyond his home town.

olelele 5 hours ago

Literal fascists in the streets in US right now racial profiling people left and right hiding behind a badge.

HN: OH MY GOD SOCIAL MEDIA BANS ARE GOVERNMENT OVERREACH!!

  • redwall_hp an hour ago

    Yes, the global rise of fascism is a huge problem. Gleefully handing fascists more power over communications and a means of de-anonymizing access to information and communications is exactly what you don't want to do.

    That's what this sudden movement is really about: maintaining bubbles of indoctrination to maintain the rightward slide of the Overton Window, and installing a permanent means of tying Internet activity to identity for monitoring.

    It's important that things like the first amendment never be compromised precisely because that erosion becomes a tool of fascism. We're inches away from neo-McCarthyism, and this is the tool to enable it.

  • pb7 5 hours ago

    Correct. Deporting illegal aliens is exactly the job of the federal government.

    • nielsbot 4 hours ago

      Clever snark!

      We should think about the consequences to everyone’s lives of having thugs cosplaying as soldiers running around disappearing innocent people off the streets because they’re brown.

chollida1 a day ago

Makes sense.

Our kids didn't get social media until they were 16 and life continued.

We don't let kids drive until 16 and smoke or drink until 18.

This just seems down right reasonable.

What is the case for allowing them to have it before 16?

  • lapcat a day ago

    The question is how the laws are enforced.

    The driving, smoking, and drinking laws are enforced outside the home. Everyone has to prove their age at the DMV to get a license and at commercial establishments to buy cigarettes and alcohol.

    The only way to enforce the social media law age minimum is to force everyone to show their ID just to use the internet, even from their own home. That seems more Orwellian to me.

multiplegeorges a day ago

Social media is the smoking of our age, and it will come to be seen the same way we see smoking now.

Just like the tobacco companies, social media companies have known about the ills of their platforms for a long time and actively hidden it and/or publicly downplayed it.

  • riskable a day ago

    No: It's more like leaded gasoline. People of the future will be like, "why would you let a big corporation control the feed algorithm?" Social media is fine. It's the algorithm that seeks addiction/engagement that's the problem. Not social media in general.

    "Social media" is far too ambiguous anyway. For example, under most definitions, Steam is a social media platform. Yet no one is addicted to sharing things via Steam. But you can! You absolutely can share and browse people's posts, screenshots, videos, and even chat (text and voice)!

    The reason why no one complains about Steam's social media features is that they're not designed to be addicting. That's not the point of the platform (it's to sell more games).

    • russelg 11 hours ago

      And that's exactly why Steam was not included in the Australian bans.

throwfaraway135 a day ago

I don't believe this is done for the benefit of children/teens. What's much more likely is that politicians don't like people having news/information sources not beholden to them.