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31 votes
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New York starts enforcing $15 broadband law that ISPs tried to kill
51 votes -
Supreme Court seems ready to back Texas law limiting access to pornography
20 votes -
US introduces additional export restrictions on AI-chips
14 votes -
Revisions of ‘hateful conduct’: what users can now say on Meta platforms
58 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg defends Meta's latest pivot in three-hour Joe Rogan interview
24 votes -
Google faces US trial for collecting data on users who opted out
39 votes -
US based The Heritage Foundation plans to ‘identify and target’ Wikipedia editors
81 votes -
UK users: Lobsters needs your help with the Online Safety Act
24 votes -
Meta is ending its fact-checking program in favor of a 'community notes' system similar to X
40 votes -
New California law prohibits using AI as basis to deny insurance claims
51 votes -
Google’s ad policy changes to allow device fingerprinting
50 votes -
Amazon’s latest seller squeeze - Amazon changes terms of compensation for lost third party inventory
22 votes -
Pornhub is now blocked in almost all of the US South
53 votes -
More than 140 Kenya Facebook moderators diagnosed with severe PTSD
18 votes -
Sweden's government considering imposing age limits on social media platforms if tech companies find themselves unable to prevent gangs from recruiting young people online
20 votes -
Australia’s social media ban and why it's not cut and dry
Australia’s proposed social media ban is deeply concerning and authoritarian. It's disturbing to see how much of the general public supports this measure. Prominent organizations, including...
Australia’s proposed social media ban is deeply concerning and authoritarian. It's disturbing to see how much of the general public supports this measure.
Prominent organizations, including Amnesty International, the Australian Human Rights Commission, and Electronic Frontiers Australia, have voiced significant concerns about this legislation:
Amnesty International's Explanation of the Social Media Ban
Australian Human Rights Commission on the Proposed Social Media Ban for Under-16s
EFA's Critique of the Social Media Age BanAustralia has a troubling history with internet legislation. Noteworthy examples include the Australian Internet Firewall under Stephen Conroy and Malcolm Turnbull's infamous statement, "The laws of mathematics are very commendable, but the only law that applies in Australia is the law of Australia," regarding encryption backdoors.
While I recognize the issues with social media, "don't feed the trolls," along with maintaining online anonymity and implementing parental controls ( no phones with unfettered internet access ), should work. This law indiscriminately punishes all Australians for the missteps of a few, potentially leading to increased identity theft through phone and email scams and causing older family who are not tech literate to lose connections with their families due to the complexities of government-issued tokens.
Adults will be the ones who are going to be most impacted by this legislation.
The scope of this law is extensive. The Online Safety website suggests that this is merely the beginning, with plans to cover the entire web, including games, adult content, and more. The consequences are profound: the erosion of true anonymity and increased risk to government whistle-blowers and journalistic sources.
Requiring individuals to provide their identity to a third party to access the internet, which many have used freely for decades, is alarming. It threatens to sanitize search results and revoke access to purchased games if users refuse additional identity verification measures. There are no grandfathered exceptions, highlighting the law's intent to de-anonymize the internet.
Although Australia lacks a constitutionally protected right to free speech, this law poses significant risks to whistleblowers and marginalized youth in remote communities. Instead of banning access and creating allure through prohibition, we should address the root causes of why younger people are drawn to such content.
Once entrenched in law, any opposition will be met with accusations of perversion or indifference to child safety, compounded by the spread of misinformation. We must critically assess and address these laws to protect our freedoms and privacy.
There wouldn't be speculation if they defined how they intend the law to work. Instead of a "don't worry about it we will work it out", give people something to say that's not so bad and I can live with it
15 votes -
Australian Parliament bans social media for under-16s with world-first law
61 votes -
Google stops letting sites like Forbes rule search for “Best CBD Gummies“
21 votes -
Goodbye, floppies - San Francisco pays Hitachi $212 million to remove 5.25-inch disks from its light rail service
30 votes -
Norway is to enforce a strict minimum age limit on social media of fifteen as the government ramped up its campaign against tech companies it says are “pitted against small children's brains”
32 votes -
The rise of the compliant speech platform
8 votes -
The attempt to reform Intel
8 votes -
Google loses €2.4bn EU antitrust case for favouring its own shopping service
33 votes -
Nothing CEO Carl Pei gives employees two months to return to office full-time
34 votes -
The US government wants to make it easier for you to click the 'unsubscribe' button
58 votes -
Apple’s requirements (subscription model only) to hit creators and fans on Patreon
53 votes -
Google and Meta struck secret ads deal to target teenagers
61 votes -
Google to charge new fee on ads in response to Canada’s digital services tax
12 votes -
Tech giants should be made subject to a global tax for their use of people's personal data, according to Norway's Finance Minister Trygve Slagsvold Vedum
30 votes -
Elon Musk says he’s moving SpaceX and X from California to Texas, blames new trans privacy law
28 votes -
Crunchyroll announces the removal of its comment section across all platforms to 'reduce harmful content'
49 votes -
US bans sales of Kaspersky anti-virus software, citing ties to Russia
22 votes -
Photoshop Terms of Service grants Adobe access to user projects for ‘content moderation’
32 votes -
New York passes legislation that would ban 'addictive' social media algorithms for kids
51 votes -
Minnesota repeals law that protected ISPs from municipal competition
22 votes -
US official says Chinese seizure of TSMC in Taiwan would be 'absolutely devastating'
27 votes -
OpenAI considers allowing users to create AI-generated pornography
20 votes -
Google begins enforcement of site reputation abuse policy with portions of sites being delisted
16 votes -
Net neutrality is back as Federal Communications Commission votes to regulate US internet providers
65 votes -
US Federal Communications Commission to vote to restore net neutrality rules years after the agency voted to repeal them
82 votes -
Texas is replacing thousands of human exam graders with AI
33 votes -
German state ditches Microsoft for Linux and LibreOffice
56 votes -
Florida latest to restrict social media for kids as legal battle looms
22 votes -
America's first right-to-repair bill that bans parts pairing
40 votes -
Tell US Congress: Stop the TikTok ban
32 votes -
Once more with feeling: Banning TikTok is unconstitutional and won’t do shit to deal with any actual threats
24 votes -
House passes bill that could ban TikTok in the US, sending it to the Senate
45 votes -
European Union approves landmark AI law, leapfrogging US to regulate critical but worrying new technology
26 votes -
EU fines Apple €1.8bn over App Store restrictions on music streaming
26 votes