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I'd be interested to know how they are going to enforce this. Furthermore, do we really want to criminalise children just for going on Facebook?Also, imagine being the youngest person in the class and being the only one not on Instagram.
I don't think the suggestion is that children will be criminalised by this.
If it's agains the law and they are caught doing it, somebody has got to be criminalised. It's either them or their parents.
I understand the motivation and agree in general terms but I keep coming back to how the heck can you enforce this? Pandora's box is well and truly blown wide open and I can't see a way of shutting it by law.
That's not how it works when it comes to buying alcohol.
I've not seen much coverage of the proposed bill, yet, but I suspect that the social media companies will be the ones on the hook - I can see all sorts of appeals from the near-limitless legal coffers of the 'FANG' group about the practical problems of age verification systems, and how they're being punished for other people's speech. It's not an argument that worked over here in advance of the Online Safety Bill, but with veneration of 'free speech' arguments in the States it might work.O.
Why are you obsessing over alcohol? This is not buying alcohol.
From closer to home. A case that reinforces the case for something being done. https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024/feb/26/golden-boy-16-killed-himself-after-being-blackmailed-over-nude-photosJust what I don't know. :'(
Maybe, rather like a driving test, we should have a posting test. (Not entirely joking)
There certainly needs to be much better education about the use of social media.
and not just to kids