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美國提出法案 禁止未成年用社交媒體

(2023-04-30 11:37:36) 下一個

美國提出法案:禁止未成年用社交媒體

英國那些事兒 |2023-04-30  

話說在本周三,美國兩黨的立法者提出了一項法案,要求禁止13歲以下的兒童使用社交媒體平台,13-17歲的兒童需要獲得父母的同意後才能使用社交平台。

法案的內容很簡單,但影響卻非常大。

根據政府發言人的說法,目前幾乎所有美國青少年的心理健康狀況都不合格,自殺的念頭和行為都在與日俱增,這一切都是社交媒體的問題。

這條法案的推出旨在保護兒童免受社交媒體的有害影響,保障未成年的心理健康:

“長期以來,大型科技公司讓我們的孩子接觸到了各種危險的內容,讓爸爸媽媽感到無助,有時還會產生悲劇。

這項法案則是一項巨大的進步,它讓父母能重新掌控孩子的生活,也能告訴媒體公司,他們有責任保護孩子的安全,讓父母了解孩子的情況,否則將麵臨嚴重的後果。”

除了限製未成年使用社交平台之外,這項法案還包括以下幾條:

限製大數據向未成年推薦內容;

要求平台使用嚴格的年齡驗證措施,但禁止將個人信息用於其它目的。

這裏的社交平台包括並不限於Tiktok,Twitter,Instagram,Facebook,Snapchat……

而新聞中用的詞很值得玩味,提到Tiktok是希望禁止(Ban), 而Ins就是管製(Regulate)

總而言之,這條法案一旦出台,美國未成年基本就算是告別互聯網了……

消息一出,美國不少父母拍手稱快。

加州父親塞繆爾·查普曼在采訪中表示,“我們感謝兩黨為此做出的努力,我真的覺得,建立規則是很重要的。”

對查普曼來說,立法限製社交媒體絕對是一件正確的事。

因為在2021年,他16歲的兒子就是在社交平台Snapchat上結識了一名毒販後,購買了大量含有芬太尼的藥物,最終服藥過量死亡了……

像查普曼這樣,擔心社交平台傷害自己孩子的父母有很多,事實上,也確實有一些未成年因為社交媒體受到了傷害。

2017年,英國14歲的女孩兒茉莉因為青春期產生了抑鬱情緒。後來在使用社交媒體的過程中,大數據根據她的習慣,給她推薦了大量的負麵信息和自殘信息,最終導致她患上了抑鬱症,自殺身亡了。

點擊圖片看原樣大小圖片

2019年,美國一名少年在社交媒體上看到了“俄羅斯輪盤賭”的視頻後,對這個危險的遊戲產生了巨大的興趣。

後來他準備拍視頻發到網上,結果在遊戲過程中,他自殺身亡。

點擊圖片看原樣大小圖片

2022年,全世界有許多孩子在嚐試Tiktok上的“窒息挑戰”時死亡,當時大批家長起訴了Tiktok。

點擊圖片看原樣大小圖片

也正因為這些“前車之鑒”,許多家長都非常支持這條法律的出台。

但也有家長並不完全同意這一點。

一位三個孩子的父親在采訪中表示:

“我覺得他們隻是把社交媒體當成了替罪羊。

精神健康危機有很多因素,是的,社交媒體確實是其中之一,但我覺得,僅僅阻止社交媒體並不足以對孩子們產生積極的影響。”

甚至還有人覺得,這條法案的出台並非隻是為了保護孩子,更是為了封禁Tiktok埋下的伏筆,製定這個法案的人,一直希望能在美國禁掉Tiktok。

大家都知道,就在今年3月,美國國會召開聽證會,要求在全美徹底封禁Tiktok,或者把Tiktok強製出售給一家美國公司。

但聽證過程中,美國議員的表現實在是一言難盡,不但遭受了許多人的批評與抵製,也讓這件事似乎就這麽不了了之了。

但事實上,這些議員並沒有放過Tiktok,

他們表示,雖然Tiktok並不是唯一一家收集個人信息的社交媒體公司,但它是唯一一家中國公司。

“在美國,如果這些公司收集你的數據並用它做壞事,你有權起訴他們。但Tiktok不行,如果他們在別的地方侵犯了你的個人信息,你無能為力。”

也正是因為這些議員的態度,才讓有些人覺得,這項立法的背後不僅是為了對兒童更安全,也是為了更便於禁止Tiktok,同時也能更好地監控其它美國社交平台。

社交媒體上有許多不適合孩子的內容,但適當的使用並不是洪水猛獸。為了保護孩子,電影有分級製度,電視和體育賽事有豁免製度,社交媒體的監管,或許有更聰明的方式。

<<<>>>>>>>>

今天在美國參議院提出的一項新的兩黨聯邦提案將設定使用社交媒體的全國年齡限製,有效地禁止任何 12 歲及以下的人使用許多孩子目前每天花費數小時的應用程序。

國會山周圍做出了無數努力,旨在保護國家兒童免受社交媒體的危害,但這項名為“社交媒體保護兒童法”的新措施針對的是矽穀用來讓孩子留在其網站上的算法 . 具體來說,它禁止 13 歲以下的兒童在社交媒體應用程序上創建帳戶,同時還大大限製了科技公司可以對 13 至 17 歲的人部署的算法。 (13 歲以下的用戶仍然可以查看在線內容,前提是他們沒有登錄帳戶。)該法案還要求在 18 歲以下的任何人創建個人資料之前征得父母的同意。

為確保未成年和兒童不創建社交媒體資料,該法案還將創建一個政府運行的年齡驗證程序,由商務部監督。 該係統將要求兒童及其父母上傳身份證明以證明他們的年齡。 雖然立法沒有強製要求公司使用政府係統,但它仍然代表著政府在在線生態係統中的作用的顯著擴展。

因此,該法案可能會通過增加政府對社交媒體平台的大量監督來顛覆我們所知的互聯網。 兩黨立法遭到兩黨懷疑。

“當蒂珀·戈爾 (Tipper Gore) 試圖禁止某些人聽音樂時,我們就經曆過這種情況,”明尼蘇達州民主黨參議員蒂娜·史密斯 (Tina Smith) 在第一次聽到這個概念時說道。

立法的發起人被這種比較冒犯了。 事實上,他們說他們的提案有意完全避免內容。

“讓我們明確一點,這項法案的內容完全中立,”來自康涅狄格州的民主黨參議員克裏斯墨菲說。 “它隻是說,你不能建立一個有目的地上癮的項目,讓特別脆弱的孩子陷入深深的黑暗兔子洞。”

兩黨的廣泛努力還表明,在多年觀察類似努力猶豫不決之後,兩黨的普通立法者要求國會采取行動保護兒童,從而給黨的領導人施加了越來越大的壓力。

阿拉巴馬州共和黨新人參議員凱蒂·布裏特 (Katie Britt) 以“肩負使命的媽媽”身份參選,並表示這對她和其他人來說是個人問題。 “把我們作為父母在家中與我們的朋友談論的問題,我們在我們的學校和社區中看到在我們麵前展開,這就是我們在這裏要做的,就是帶來那個聲音,父母的聲音, ”布裏特說。

至於他們的措施是否會扼殺下一代科技企業家,布裏特說情況恰恰相反。 “這就是我們為之奮鬥的目標,”Britt 說。 “您希望我們的孩子身體健康,並為實現他們的美國夢做好準備。”

阿肯色州參議員湯姆科頓是另一位共和黨作家。 在民主黨方麵,來自康涅狄格州的參議員墨菲與來自夏威夷的布賴恩沙茨一起擔任主要讚助商。 這四個人都很年輕,至少在參議院看來是這樣,而且都有年幼的孩子。

雖然所有主要的矽穀社交媒體公司——從 Instagram 到 TikTok——都表示他們阻止兒童使用他們的應用程序,但這些參議員表示這些努力都失敗了。

“這是行不通的,”沙茨說。“沒有任何言論自由權利會被一種讓你心煩意亂的算法所幹擾,而這些算法讓我們越來越兩極分化、相互貶低、沮喪和憤怒。 發生在我們所有成年人身上的事情已經夠糟糕了,我們至少能做的就是保護我們的孩子。”

雖然這項措施是由進步的民主黨人和參議院最熱心的保守派之一發起的,但來自不同意識形態領域的立法者同樣對該提案持懷疑態度,表明通過任何新的媒體措施,包括針對兒童的措施,都將麵臨艱難的道路。 許多立法者在保護在線兒童和維護我們所知的強大互聯網之間左右為難。 自然,大多數參議員都在向自己的家人尋求指導。

“我的孫子們有翻蓋手機。 他們在變老之前沒有智能手機,”猶他州共和黨參議員米特羅姆尼說。 羅姆尼——他對這個想法持開放態度,盡管最初持懷疑態度——說他自己的家庭在這些問題上什至不一致。

“我有五個兒子,所以有五個不同的家庭,他們確實有不同的方法,”羅姆尼說。 “而最小的兒子是最嚴格的,而大兒子並沒有真正認為這有什麽大不了的。”

對於史密斯來說,這位明尼蘇達州參議員擔心她的政黨會給人留下大姐姐的印象,幾年前當她的兒子們為家裏的第一台台式電腦爭吵時,她自己家裏甚至都不統一。 她的孩子也被證明是(迷你)黑客。

“我們試圖弄清楚如何監控他們與計算機的交互,我們很快發現,至少對他們來說,很難製定硬性規定,因為孩子們總能找到辦法,”史密斯說。 “對於他們認為對孩子來說正確的事情,不同的父母有不同的規則。”

雖然史密斯對新措施持開放態度,但她很謹慎。 “我想,我傾向於對硬性規定有點懷疑,因為我不確定它們是否有效,而且我認為父母和孩子應該有自由決定什麽對他們的家庭來說是正確的, ”史密斯說。

雖然史密斯是一位進步的民主黨人,但在這項新措施上,她目前與傾向於自由主義的肯塔基州共和黨參議員蘭德保羅保持一致。 “父母對孩子在互聯網上看到的內容、他們在電視上看到的內容進行一些監督,所有這些都很重要。 我不確定我是否希望聯邦政府[參與],”保羅說。

新措施也有競爭。 就在上周,康涅狄格州民主黨參議員 Richard Blumenthal 和參議院司法委員會共和黨領袖、南卡羅來納州的 Lindsey Graham 重新提出了他們的 EARN IT 法案——消除濫用和猖獗忽視互動技術法案。 該措施將剝奪當前第 230 條對任何發布在線兒童性剝削內容的網站的保護。 第 230 條仍然是一項極具爭議的法律,因為它保護在線企業免於對其用戶在其平台上發布的大部分內容承擔責任。

幫助談判這項新努力的夏威夷民主黨人 Schatz 是該 EARN IT 法案的原始共同發起人。 他說,所有這些來自不同角度的努力表明,國會終於認真對待互聯網對兒童的影響。 “多多益善。 有足夠的動力。 所有這些努力都應該是免費的,”Schatz 說。

還有由田納西州共和黨參議員 Marsha Blackburn 和 Blumenthal 發起的兒童在線安全法案 (Kids' Online Safety Act, KOSA)。 該法案旨在更新旨在保護兒童在線活動的現行法規。 它在上屆代表大會結束時升溫——一致通過委員會——在黨的領導人最終埋葬它之前。 但這是一個新的國會,它的讚助商繼續推動它。 這項新措施的讚助商表示,他們並沒有試圖取代它。

“我們相信它符合這項立法,”沙茨說。

今年早些時候,密蘇裏州共和黨參議員、前州檢察長喬什·霍利 (Josh Hawley) 提出了一項措施,將 16 歲定為使用社交媒體的年齡限製,這引起了人們的關注。 霍利的成熟法案——或者說,使年齡驗證技術統一、穩健和有效的法案——將創建所謂的私人訴訟權,因此如果科技公司被發現向兒童提供社交媒體賬戶,他們將更容易被起訴 15 和下。

“我認為這是孩子們開始擁有更多獨立性的年齡,”霍利談到他選擇那個年齡的原因。

至於新措施? “好的。 看,我開始了一種趨勢。 這很好,”霍利說。 “我還沒有看到它的細節,但我認為我們越能在這裏獲得動力,真正做一些保護孩子的事情,我完全讚成。”

A US Bill Would Ban Kids Under 13 From Joining Social Media

 

https://www.wired.com/story/protecting-kids-social-media-act/ 

Aprl 26, 2023 3:28 PM

The legislation would insert the government into online platforms' age-verification efforts—a move that makes some US lawmakers queasy.

A NEW BIPARTISAN federal proposal introduced in the US Senate today would set a national age limit for using social media, effectively banning anyone 12 and under from using the apps many children currently spend hours a day on.

There are countless efforts floating around Capitol Hill aimed at safeguarding the nation’s children from the dangers of social media, but this new measure, known as the Protecting Kids on Social Media Act, takes aim at the algorithms Silicon Valley employs to keep kids on their sites. Specifically, it bars children under 13 from creating accounts on social media apps, while also greatly curtailing the algorithms tech companies could deploy on people between 13 and 17 years old. (Users under 13 would still be able to view online content, provided they aren’t logged into an account.) The bill would also require parental consent before anyone under 18 could create a profile. 

To ensure pre-teens and children don’t create social media profiles, the bill would also create a government-run age-verification program, overseen by the Department of Commerce. The system would require children and their parents to upload identification to prove their age. While the legislation doesn’t mandate that companies use the government system, it would nevertheless represent a significant expansion of the government’s role in the online ecosystem.

As such, the bill could upend the internet as we know it by adding substantial government oversight over social media platforms. The bipartisan legislation’s being met with bipartisan skepticism.

“We kind of went through this when Tipper Gore was trying to ban music for some people,” Senator Tina Smith, a Minnesota Democrat, says upon first hearing of the concept.

The legislation’s sponsors are offended by the comparison. In fact, they say their proposal purposely avoids content altogether. 

“Let’s be clear, this bill is completely content neutral,” says senator Chris Murphy, a Connecticut Democrat. “All it says is that you cannot build a purposefully addictive program that leads especially vulnerable children down deep, deep dark rabbit holes.” 

The broadly bipartisan effort also showcases the pressure ratcheting up on party leaders by rank and file lawmakers on both sides of the aisle who are demanding Congress act to protect children, after years of watching similar efforts dither. 

Freshman Senator Katie Britt, an Alabama Republican, ran as “a momma on a mission” and says this is a personal issue to her and the others. “Bringing the issues that we talk about as parents in the home, with our friends, we watch unfold before us in our schools and our communities, that's what we're here to do, is to bring that voice, the voice of parents,” Britt says. 

As to whether their measure could stifle the next generation of tech entrepreneurs, Britt says the opposite is the case. “That's what we're fighting for,” Britt says. “You want our kids to be healthy and prepared to achieve their American dream.”

Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton is the other Republican author. On the Democratic side, senator Murphy of Connecticut is joined by Brian Schatz of Hawaii as a lead sponsor. All four are young, in Senate terms at least, and all have young children. 

Former CIA Chief of Disguise Answers Spy Questions From Twitter

While all the major Silicon Valley social media firms—from Instagram to TikTok—say they block children from using their apps, these senators say those efforts have failed. 

“It’s not working,” Schatz says.“There’s no free speech right to be jammed with an algorithm that makes you upset, and these algorithms are making us increasingly polarized and disparaging and depressed and angry at each other. And it’s bad enough that it’s happening to all of us adults, the least we can do is protect our kids.” 

While the measure’s sponsored by progressive Democrats and one of the most ardent conservatives in the Senate, lawmakers from across the ideological spectrum are equally skeptical of the proposal, showing the difficult road ahead for passing any new media measure, including those aimed at children. Many lawmakers are torn between protecting kids online and preserving the robust internet as we know it. Naturally, most senators are looking at their own families for guidance. 

“My grandkids have flip phones. They don't have smartphones until they get older,” senator Mitt Romney, a Utah Republican, says. Romney—who’s open to the idea, if initially dubious—says there’s not even uniformity in his own family on these issues. 

“I have five sons, so there are five different families and they do have different approaches,” Romney says. “And the youngest son is the one that's most strict, and the oldest son didn't really think of it as being such a big deal.”

For Smith, the Minnesota senator worried about her party coming across as Big Sister, there wasn’t even uniformity in her own household when her boys were fighting over the family’s first desktop computer ages ago. And her kids also proved to be (mini)hackers. 

“We were trying to figure out how to monitor their interactions with the computer, and we quickly figured out that, at least for them, it was hard to put hard and fast rules, because kids find a way,” Smith says. “And different parents have different rules for what they think is the right thing for their kids.”

While Smith is open to the new measure, she’s wary. “I tend to be, I guess, a little bit suspicious of hard and fast rules, because I'm not sure that they work and because I sort of think that parents and kids should have the freedom to decide what’s right for their family,” Smith says.

While Smith is a progressive Democrat, on this new measure, she’s currently aligned with senator Rand Paul, a Libertarian-leaning Kentucky Republican. “Parents exercise some oversight of what their kids view on the internet, what they view on television, all these things are important. I'm not sure I want the federal government [involved],” Paul says.

The new measure also has competition. Just last week senators Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat, and South Carolina’s Lindsey Graham, the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, reintroduced their EARN IT Act—the Eliminating Abusive and Rampant Neglect of Interactive Technologies Act. That measure would strip away the current Section 230 protections for any sites that publish online child sexual exploitation content. Section 230 remains a highly controversial law because it protects online businesses from liability for much of what its users post on their platforms. 

Schatz, the Hawaii Democrat who helped negotiate this new effort, is an original co-sponsor of that EARN IT Act. He says all these efforts coming from different angles show that Congress is finally serious about the impact the internet has on children. “The more the merrier. There's plenty of momentum. All of these efforts ought to be complimentary,” Schatz says.

There’s also the Kids' Online Safety Act, or KOSA, which is sponsored by senators Marsha Blackburn, a Tennessee Republican, and Blumenthal. The bill is intended to update current statutes meant to protect children’s online activities. It picked up steam at the end of the last Congress—unanimously passing out of committee—before party leaders ultimately buried it. But this is a new Congress, and its sponsors continue to push it. Sponsors of this new measure say they’re not trying to replace it.  

“We believe it’s compatible with this legislation,” Schatz says. 

Earlier this year, heads turned when senator Josh Hawley, a Missouri Republican and former state attorney general, introduced a measure setting 16 as the age limit for using social media. Hawley’s MATURE ACT—or, Making Age-Verification Technology Uniform, Robust, and Effective Act—would create a so-called private right of action, so tech companies could more easily be sued if they’re found offering social media accounts to children 15 and under. 

“I thought that that’s an age at which kids are starting to have a little more independence,” Hawley says of why he chose that age.

As for the new measure? “Good. See, I started a trend. That’s good,” Hawley says. “I haven’t seen the details of it, but I think that the more we can get momentum here on actually doing something that protects kids, I’m all for it.”

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