Advertisement
Inside Big Tech's Bid to Sink the Online Kid Safety Bill
Tech giants and their allies lean on culture-war issues to splinter bipartisan support for the bill
Menu
Front Page Breaking News Comments Flagged Comments Recently Flagged User Blogs Write a Blog Entry Create a Poll Edit Account Weekly Digest Stats Page RSS Feed Back Page
Subscriptions
Read the Retort using RSS.
RSS Feed
Author Info
LampLighter
Joined 2013/04/13Visited 2024/11/20
Status: user
MORE STORIES
Aztec Death Whistles Have Strange Effect on the Human Brain (2 comments) ...
1 in 5 Adults Get Their News from Social Media Influencers (17 comments) ...
Inside Big Tech's Bid to Sink the Online Kid Safety Bill (3 comments) ...
'Unbelievable' Video Shows 2 Bees Working to Open a Bottle (9 comments) ...
Trump Team Is Seeking to Ease US Rules for Self-driving Cars (10 comments) ...
Alternate links: Google News | Twitter
Admin's note: Participants in this discussion must follow the site's moderation policy. Profanity will be filtered. Abusive conduct is not allowed.
More from the article...
... When the Senate passed the Kids Online Safety Act in a nearly unanimous vote in July, it was a rare moment of bipartisan unity, suggesting overwhelming agreement that new rules are needed to protect children from potential harm online. More than three months later, the bill is stalled in the House, snarled by intensifying conservative concerns and a record-breaking lobbying effort by technology companies. ...
More than three months later, the bill is stalled in the House, snarled by intensifying conservative concerns and a record-breaking lobbying effort by technology companies. ...
#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2024-11-20 02:04 AM | Reply
It is still a bad bill that will increase government and corporate censorship, restrict the rights of adults and children and increase online monitoring.
The revised KOSA is still likely to result in websites expanding content censorship and being forced to enact age and location verification measures. Do you really want the Trump administration to be able to be able to determine what type of content is harmful to minors. KOSA could result in minors being restricted from accessing information on topics such as gender, race, suicide prevention, sexual development, etc?
Furthermore, why does it only ban deceptive practices targeting minors and require sites to give minor's the options to restrict the use of their personal data or even mandate the deletion of their accounts and data? If those are important features when it comes to protecting minors from online exploitation from big tech then why not also mandate those options be available for adult users? I trust my 15 year old nephew to make better decisions online than I do my 70 year old mother.
#2 | Posted by johnny_hotsauce at 2024-11-20 03:57 PM | Reply
Reminds me of back when the tobacco companies were spending tens of millions of dollars (when that was a lot of money) fighting restrictions on cigarette smoking. How'd that work out? Point is, if something truly is wrong, sooner or later even the thickest headed MAGAt will understand.
#3 | Posted by moder8 at 2024-11-20 09:21 PM | Reply
Post a comment The following HTML tags are allowed in comments: a href, b, i, p, br, ul, ol, li and blockquote. Others will be stripped out. Participants in this discussion must follow the site's moderation policy. Profanity will be filtered. Abusive conduct is not allowed. Anyone can join this site and make comments. To post this comment, you must sign it with your Drudge Retort username. If you can't remember your username or password, use the lost password form to request it. Username: Password: Home | Breaking News | Comments | User Blogs | Stats | Back Page | RSS Feed | RSS Spec | DMCA Compliance | Privacy | Copyright 2024 World Readable
The following HTML tags are allowed in comments: a href, b, i, p, br, ul, ol, li and blockquote. Others will be stripped out. Participants in this discussion must follow the site's moderation policy. Profanity will be filtered. Abusive conduct is not allowed.
Home | Breaking News | Comments | User Blogs | Stats | Back Page | RSS Feed | RSS Spec | DMCA Compliance | Privacy | Copyright 2024 World Readable