21 comments

  • shaftway 3 hours ago
    I feel like there are some key differences between the companies though.

    The second one outlined for Meta is:

    > Heavily-redacted undated internal document discussing “School Blasts” as a strategy for gaining more high school users (mass notifications sent during the school day).

    This sounds a lot like Meta being intentionally disruptive.

    The first one outlined for YouTube is:

    > Slidedeck on the role that YouTube’s autoplay feature plays in “Tech Addiction” that concludes “Verdict: Autoplay could be potentially disrupting sleep patterns. Disabling or limiting Autoplay during the night could result in sleep savings.”

    This sounds like YouTube proactively looking for solutions to a problem. And later on for YouTube:

    > Discussing efforts to improve digital well-being, particularly among youth. Identified three concern areas impacting users 13-24 disproportionately: habitual heavy use, late night use, and unintentional use.

    This sounds like YouTube taking actual steps to improve the situation.

    • probably_wrong 2 hours ago
      > This sounds like YouTube taking actual steps to improve the situation.

      The issue I take with statements like that is that they are saying one thing while doing the opposite. This document [1], for instance, shows that YouTube knew as early as April 2025 that infinite feeds of short form content can "displace valuable activities like time with friends or sleep", but that hasn't stopped them from aggressively pushing YouTube shorts everywhere.

      The most charitable interpretation I can think of is that there are two factions, one worried about the effects of YouTube in teens and a second one worried about growth at all costs. And I don't think the first one is winning.

      [1] https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.cand.40...

    • 1bpp 3 hours ago
      My YouTube use definitely isn't healthy, but it's still the only social app that asks me to take a break if I use it too long or late at night. That should be standard in any of these apps.
      • nico 2 hours ago
        I get those on TikTok. There’s a video of someone asking if you’ve been scrolling/watching for too long and recommending to take a break
      • silverquiet 2 hours ago
        Does it recommend taking a break? Mostly I've seen it ask if I'm still watching. I've always assumed this is not for user benefit, but in order to not spend bandwidth on a screen that is not being looked at.

        The only site I'm familiar with that has somewhat decent self-limiting functions built in is HN's no procrastination settings. But that's of course because HN isn't run to make money, but as a hobby.

      • ryeights 2 hours ago
        TikTok does this as well.
      • miltonlost 2 hours ago
        Earthbound even did this on the SNES back in 1994
      • iwontberude 2 hours ago
        What country are you in? I have never seen this in the US although I have been a very long time subscriber to YouTube Premium.
        • thrance 2 hours ago
          I get it too, in France. You can disable it in the settings.
    • jacquesm 3 hours ago
      No, it sounds like youtube being fully aware of the consequences of their offering but couched in terms that allows them to pretend they were not. 'could' indeed.
    • corranh 3 hours ago
      With the looping TikTok-style shorts, YouTube seems to be more habit forming than ever.
    • jhhh 2 hours ago
      YouTube Shorts exist, which they brag about hours watched, so I don't think they really care about those things at all.
    • nisegami 3 hours ago
      Not realistic to reply to all your replies re:youtube, but they've absolutely added some features to mitigate bedtime use and at least for me they were opt-out rather than opt-in.
    • freejazz 1 hour ago
      >This sounds like YouTube taking actual steps to improve the situation.

      Maybe if they actually did any of those things...

    • ares623 3 hours ago
      Are they taking actual steps though? Or was that letting a team do the work to make them feel better but never actually implementing it.
    • micromacrofoot 3 hours ago
      > This sounds like YouTube taking actual steps to improve the situation.

      And yet here we are years later without change. So we've got proof that they knew this and have done nothing. Don't need to speculate at all.

    • iwontberude 3 hours ago
      [flagged]
  • akramachamarei 13 minutes ago
    This is an interesting, valuable article. It should definitely be shared widely, especially with parents and teachers. I would love to see ISPs (including cell carriers) sell content control mechanisms to customers so parents and teachers can control at the internet service level how much social media their children and students use. I am also interested in open source/independent/small time developers who would seem highly motivated to make blocking tools and plugins for home routers and the like. There's a broad world of possibilities here.

    That said, I am deeply disturbed by the authoritarians in these comments. Government enforced internet age verification is a really really bad idea. I don't want the internet put in a straitjacket. I am eager to hear if someone can explain how these numerously proposed legislations can be done without seriously diminishing the freedom to be anonymous and private on the internet.

  • sharts 3 hours ago
    This is obvious for anyone that understands sales and marketing. The real question isn’t whether this was true—the question is why does anyone expect this revelation would change anything?

    They made their wealth. They bought their politicians. In the worst possible case for them they would pay some fee that amounts to absolutely nothing making a dent in their personal day to day lives as a consequence of their actions.

    It’s the cost of doing business these days. Do the wrong thing so long as you make more than enough money to cover the penalty fee.

    Nothing to see here.

    • worik 2 hours ago
      > In the worst possible case for them they would pay some fee that amounts to absolutely nothing making a dent in their personal day to day lives as a consequence of their actions.

      Probably, not definitely

      It would be possible to put the executives in jail.

      • dylan604 2 hours ago
        > It would be possible to put the executives in jail.

        In what universe would this be possible?

      • NickC25 1 hour ago
        Possibly, yes, but those executives have enough money to cut a deal to not only stay out of jail, but to also fund the re-election campaign for the DA + prosecution team, and to also give a job to the prosecutor's cousin, sibling, and/or in-law.
    • soco 2 hours ago
      Based on the aggressive reactions all across the billionaire board toward the European wrist-slap initiative, I would guess Europe is moving in the correct direction with it and the slaps would correctly hurt.
  • alamortsubite 2 hours ago
    The "weird" thing about YouTube Shorts is no matter how many times you hide them (by clicking "Not Interested" or "Show fewer of these", however they label it), YouTube will continue to show them to you in your feed. I've hidden that crap 100 times and no doubt it'll be back soon.
    • phatfish 35 minutes ago
      Revanced YouTube app, turn off all the crap. Sometimes I open the official YouTube app to check my subscriptions and wonder how anyone uses it. If Google wasn't so ghastly and YouTube Premium had all the features of Revanced I would happily pay for it.

      I use the Revanced patched app logged out so Google doesn't decide to ban my account on a whim. Yes, one day I will dump Gmail, its getting closer with the state of things at the moment.

    • CamelCaseCondo 2 hours ago
      What I find strange about an advertising company’s video service is that when I open my smartphone in a region with a different language my youtube ads also change language.
    • jimvdv 2 hours ago
      I started using an extension called “social focus”. Allows me to hide all kinds of distractions on social media and YouTube, can highly recommend
  • sagacity 3 hours ago
    It's good to see that many countries are working on lesiglation to protect children and teens against this, since the companies clearly aren't trying.
    • mikkupikku 3 hours ago
      American tech corps act like cigarette companies but we're still at the point where banning them for kids is considered weird, fringe and even dangerous. Crazy.
      • AnthonyMouse 2 hours ago
        The general problem is that nobody actually needs cigarettes but communication is fundamental to the human experience. How do you even propose to define "social media" in a way that can distinguish between it and any other public forum for discussion?

        The actual problem is not that kids are using group communications technology, it's that the network effect in public interaction has been captured by private companies with a perverse incentive to maximize engagement.

        That's just as much of a problem for adults as for teenagers and the solution doesn't look anything like "ban people from using this category of thing" and instead looks something like "require interoperability/federation" so there isn't a central middle man sitting on the chokepoint who makes more money the more time people waste using the service.

        • dylan604 2 hours ago
          > but communication is fundamental to the human experience.

          Humans survived well before the internet, the telephone, the telegraph, or even international post.

          • AnthonyMouse 2 hours ago
            In those days they did this by having physical public spaces for interaction, which we've since priced people out of through artificial scarcity of real estate via zoning laws. And even if people were willing to solve that one, it would take time to actually build new buildings, and doing that would have to be done first.

            It's also assuming that we're willing to abandon a technological capacity (not having to personally travel to someone's location to communicate with them) that humans have had since before Moses came down from the mountain, which seems like a fairly silly constraint to impose when there are obviously better alternatives available.

            • pinnochio 1 hour ago
              > In those days they did this by having physical public spaces for interaction, which we've since priced people out of through artificial scarcity of real estate via zoning laws.

              IDK where to begin with this, because we clearly do have physical public spaces for interaction, whether free like parks or not free like coffee shops. People also hang out at each others' homes. Moreover, supply of public spaces increases when there's demand, much of which is being soaked up by social media.

              You're also acting like we can't meaningfully distinguish between social media and other forms of communication and that we have to be all or nothing about it, which is a bewildering take. Even social media can be meaningfully distinguished in terms of design features. Facebook back when it was posting on friends' walls, no likes, comments, shares, friend/follower counts, or feeds, was fun and mostly harmless. LinkedIn was genuinely useful when the feed was nothing more than professional updates. They've all since morphed into toxic cesspools of social comparison, parasociality, polarization, disinformation, and other problems. Interoperability/federation doesn't solve those problems: most of the interoperable and federated solutions actually perpetuate them, because the problematic design features are part of the spec.

      • dylan604 2 hours ago
        At least they are not running commercials saying 9 out of 10 doctors agree social media is good for you. That's the best thing I can say about them.
        • red-iron-pine 18 minutes ago
          if social media trends * related data suggested it would work they'd totally do it
        • mikkupikku 27 minutes ago
          Ha, true. But I wouldn't put it past them if it ever gets to the point where they genuinely feel threatened.
    • uniq7 3 hours ago
      The problem is when government's solutions go through identifying everyone and collaterally tracking their actions.

      In the same way parents can be blamed for not keeping their children safe around guns/alcohol/drugs, they should also be blamed for not keeping the children out of digital dangers, and keep mandatory age verifications out of here.

      • akramachamarei 32 minutes ago
        Very shocking that you're being downvoted on HackerNews of all places, where I'd expect people to be tech-literate and aware of the harms of internet age verification law etc.
        • mikkupikku 16 minutes ago
          I downvoted it because he invoked the analogy of alcohol and tobacco while simultaneously arguing that it should be totally on the parents. That's not how it's done for alcohol and tobacco! If that were true then any shop could sell booze and cigs to kids, and if that were the case then how could parents possibly hope to stop it?

          The premise that parenting is wholly on the parents and society at large doesn't need to play any role in raising kids is a manifestation of the kind of libertarianism that appeals to techies on the spectrum who want to find the simplest possible ruleset for everything, but it just doesn't work that way in reality.

      • sagacity 3 hours ago
        This is like saying parents are at fault when a gun salesman sells a weapon to their 12 year old.
        • uniq7 2 hours ago
          More like saying parents are at fault when a gun salesman enters their home every day, talks for hours with their children, and sells them weapons.

          Have these parents tried to not let the salesman in?

          • rightbyte 1 hour ago
            The salesman is at their friends place. And is a prerequisite for soccer team meetups. Etc. You need most parents to cooperate to bar him... but yeah I guess being prudent at home helps.
            • uniq7 46 minutes ago
              I totally understand that "the salesman" is everywhere and that a single person can't fight against that, but he is everywhere because most parents are not blocking him in the first place, and that's exactly my point. Those are the parents that need to be blamed.

              In my first message I was not targeting those parents who try to block this but can't; I was targeting those parents that use Youtube to distract their kids since they are babies, those who give unrestricted access with no control at all, those who don't care. We all know people like that.

              This is just an hypothesis, but if parents were fined every time their kid accessed social media, I'm sure most kids wouldn't be on it.

          • sagacity 2 hours ago
            Your argument is conflating smart phones with social media apps and you seem to be assuming that kids wouldn't have access to their phone in other locations where they are unsupervised, subject to peer pressure, etc.

            The "just say no" argument, basically.

            • uniq7 2 hours ago
              Devices and networks can be configured with parental controls, and the blockage doesn't need to be 100% effective. The kid accessing Facebook from a friend's phone 15 mins a day is tolerable, while giving them access to drugs or a gun 15 mins a day is not.

              There is also the education part that for some reason we are ignoring. Kids are going to be able to access drugs in locations where they are unsupervised, they are going to be subject to peer pressure, etc. The job of the parents is to prepare them for that, as they should prepare them for the negative effects of social media.

        • ares623 2 hours ago
          Not even “sell” but “give for free, constantly, every day, delivered directly to their house, disguised as a toy”
      • ares623 3 hours ago
        Problem is that social media doesn’t have negative connotations like guns/alcohol/drugs do. That makes it hard or impossible for individual parents to restrict it. They are perceived as crazy or paranoid or controlling. Plus if their child does opt out of social media, they become a social outcast from their peers who are still on it, which is a worse outcome for the child.

        It almost sounds like multiple parents from a large number of households need to collectively act in unison to address the problem effectively. Hmm collective action, that sounds familiar. I wonder if there’s a way to enforce such a collective action?

        To be clear, I do agree that putting the ban on the software/platform side is the wrong approach. The ban should be on the physical hardware, similar to how guns/alcohol/tobacco which are all physical objects. But I don’t have the luxury to let perfect be the enemy of close enough.

        • rightbyte 1 hour ago
          > Plus if their child does opt out of social media, they become a social outcast from their peers who are still on it, which is a worse outcome for the child.

          I don't think that is the case any more since social media isn't social like it used to be?

    • idontwantthis 3 hours ago
      That’s pretty much the whole purpose of government and if it isn’t doing that then it has abdicated its primary responsibility.
      • akramachamarei 34 minutes ago
        I think many people would disagree with you that the primary responsibility of government is to protect people from themselves.
        • idontwantthis 31 minutes ago
          I’m talking about protecting people from evil actors with immense power to do harm.
  • betaby 3 hours ago
    Meanwhile 2 billion Coca Colas are sold per day. That's over 75 million kgs of sugar/day - no one bats an eye.

    Teen/kid addiction to sugar was and is a priority.

    Social networks is a sugar for minds.

    • shimman 3 hours ago
      You must have been a child when Michelle Obama said that children needed better food and half the country lost their collective minds. Hard to do anything when corporations control what most legislation is passed.
      • betaby 3 hours ago
        > You must have been a child when Michelle Obama said

        My kids were born long before Obama took the office.

        What's your point again? That president can't control the quality of the food in the country under their control?

        • reaperducer 3 hours ago
          The way I read it, he takes issue with your assertion that "nobody bats an eye" at sugar in Coke.

          This is quite the opposite of everything I've ever seen in my entire life in America.

          Or perhaps since you mention sugar, not corn syrup, and list quantities in kilograms not pounds or tons, he suspects you may not actually have first-hand experience with this.

          • betaby 3 hours ago
            > you may not actually have first-hand experience

            Sigh ( in canadian )

            • reaperducer 1 hour ago
              Thank you for proving my point. Unless Obama was also president of Canada. I may have missed that.
        • shimman 2 hours ago
          Point is that people do in fact try to change what you're complaining about, your dismissive comments are just sad. Go out and organize rather than shouting into the void if this is what you care about.
      • reaperducer 3 hours ago
        I've always wondered if her initiative, which caused some big food companies to reduce fat and salt in their products, and change their frying media, is the reason for the rise of Sriracha in America.

        My theory is that the food tasted less flavorful, so people compensated by adding their own.

        I don't eat a lot of junk food, but for a long time after the Obama administration, when I did partake, often my immediate reaction was "Wow. These aren't as tasty as I remember."

        /I'm looking at you, Cool Ranch Doritos.

    • antiframe 3 hours ago
      "No one bats an eye" is a weird take when the Federal Government, via the Department of Health and Human Services, has literally just declared war on added sugar. [1] Also, lots of people have already changed their diets [2] regarded added sugar.

      Sugar has been vilified for longer and more vociferously than social media use by kids, but that may be changing now.

      [1]: https://www.latimes.com/science/story/2026-01-07/trump-admin...

      [2]: https://ajcn.nutrition.org/article/S0002-9165(23)02461-9/pdf

      • tokyobreakfast 3 hours ago
        Well the narrative has already been promulgated that they are "anti-science" so it's being ignored. Sugar is good. Hey Mom, send down more Pixie Stix!!
        • antiframe 3 hours ago
          You must run in different circles than I, most people I know have reduced their added sugar consumption. My point was that there has been a swelling wave of anti-sugar sentiment over the last decades and it's reach the point were even RFK loudly said sugar is bad. That's the opposite of "no one bat's an eye". Of course people will ignore all sorts of advice for all sorts of reasons, but the sentiment (as shown by the decline of added sugar consumption) is there, and growing.
          • dylan604 1 hour ago
            The Coke Classic is still selling. Coke Zero has not replaced Classic. Both "no one bat's an eye" and your use of "most people" (even with the "I know" qualifier) are clearly extremes of both sides of the conversation being intentionally used. The fact that things like Diet, Zero, etc version of Coke and other soft drinks exist show people are paying attention to sugar. The fact that sugary products are still being purchases shows that not everyone has changed their habits.

            Shouting extreme positions doesn't really move the converstation

          • tokyobreakfast 2 hours ago
            I recall a discussion here recently whereupon the list of items eligible for nutrition assistance (food stamps) in the USA were changed to exclude unhealthy foods, especially those with added sugar. Which BTW affects poorer communities disproportionately with long-term health problems like diabetes.

            Elimination of processed sugar is a good thing.

            Despite this, the discussion quickly pivoted to "how dare you keep poor children from enjoying birthday cake".

    • worik 2 hours ago
      > no one bats an eye.

      Untrue

      My six year old grand child made up a food related game for me to play with them that involved penalties for choosing food with sugar.

      Somebody is getting to them, good

  • socalgal2 2 hours ago
    Where are the smoking guns? All I see is normal talk for how to get customers. A smoking gun would be "Teens love posts about X even though we know X is really bad for them. Let's promote lots of X". But I don't see any of that. I just see market research etc.

    I could post every quote on the page and respond to it how it's not a smoking gun but not one of them seemed like a smoking gun to me. Anyone care to point to one that seems like a smoking gun to them?

    • rustystump 2 hours ago
      We know teens love endless feeds but we know endless feeds is bad for them so we give them endless feeds…
      • rustystump 2 hours ago
        To be clear social media is not as clear cut bad as the endless news/for you feeds which are designed to keep you scrolling vs seeing what friends are doing
  • eimrine 2 hours ago
    Why Zuckerberg is any better than the jeevacation?

    Both cases makes teens as victims, both cases was a great deal for them but only from the first look. Both cases are piramid-like schemes when the victims attract new victims to keep benefitting from the system. Is it just like in alcohol case, when having too many victims justifies a bad spirit as the new norm?

  • commandlinefan 1 hour ago
    This is just normal par-for-the-course business chasing an expanding market. Entertainment companies, in particular, _always_ focus on the youth market. When I was a teenager, record companies were obsessed with what teenagers liked: that's just the nature of the business. Headline is deliberately misleading. The (few) references in here to "addiction" are negative; suggesting ways to reach the youth market _without_ risking addictive behavior.
  • jackdoe 3 hours ago
    Johnny Cash - God's Gonna Cut You Down: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJlN9jdQFSc
    • guerrilla 3 hours ago
      Awesome song. Gives me chills. Wish I believed in a just God like that.
      • jackdoe 1 hour ago
        you are made either of reason or of faith, but the choice what you are made of you can not make nor with reason nor with faith

        reason can not choose reason, and faith can not choose faith

  • benoau 2 hours ago
    Not just teens, addiction has been weaponized and monetized relentlessly - the whole concept of "whales" is contingent on fostered addiction.
  • mikkupikku 3 hours ago
    I fully expect this to get ignored like all the other similar revelations. Heads should roll, literally, but nothing will happen. Does anybody have any earnest hope for reform? Even in Europe where the public is supposedly keyed in, and where there is some political traction for getting away from American companies, nobody seems to take the idea of banning these corporations seriously.
    • jmusall 3 hours ago
      I think the possibility of banning certain sites at least for minors is being discussed, after Australia set the precedent. But this of course has downsides, too, as some form of verification has to be implemented, that would almost certainly reduce anonymity and carry risks to personal data protection. A complete ban is unrealistic since people actually like to use these platforms. Plus, it would certainly entail massive political repercussions from the US government. This is already happening when US American companies are simply fined in the EU.
      • reorder9695 2 hours ago
        Does that outweigh the loss of privacy involved? I really don't think it does personally, I should not have to show anyone ID to have an Instagram account, privacy and anonymity is a feature not a bug.
        • mikkupikku 23 minutes ago
          The privacy issue is one of the reasons I favor a total ban.
        • dylan604 1 hour ago
          To me, the claim of privacy is the wrong concept. Anonymous would be a better description. People are posting things on a public website to be viewed by the public.
    • integralid 3 hours ago
      The idea of banning meta or Google is indeed not serious. What's realistic is forcing them to behave by issuing fines that make such behavior prohibitively expensive. Admittedly there's nobody doing that in Europe seriously yet, but that's because the current unhinged head of American state has meltdown every time American bigtech get a wrist slap.
      • mikkupikku 2 hours ago
        > What's realistic is forcing them to behave by issuing fines that make such behavior prohibitively expensive.

        Europeans have been saying that for what, 20 years now? How long does it have to not work before we stop saying that it's a realistic solution?

        • fsflover 2 hours ago
          There were no serious attempts at enforcing the rules.
          • mikkupikku 1 hour ago
            If that's so, then is it realistic to expect that to somehow change? These corps have been fined more times than I can count, but it's clearly not working.
    • tryauuum 3 hours ago
      how would you ban it?

      I don't want the russian-style ban enforced by ISPs

      Probably punishing companies who pay YouTube for ads would work

      • mikkupikku 1 hour ago
        Much if not all of Europe already has ISP level bans. If they can use those bans against football streaming sites, why not Facebook?

        And actually I think just banning them from conducting any business, accepting payments/etc, would be mostly sufficient. They could continue to operate at a loss, but it would put American corps at such a disadvantage that domestic social media might be able to compete, and enforcing regulations against domestic companies should be far more feasible.

      • soco 2 hours ago
        On which grounds would you punish some companies which are using a fully legal platform? If you had beef with the ad contents, you'd punish them already for that. But if you have beef with the platform algorithms, punish them for exactly that. Not over proxies! As long the algorithm was designed for creating dependence, than regulate that - exactly like you (should) regulate other substances creating dependence. And some countries are going exactly this way: not only Australia but also Finland, Spain...
    • mmooss 2 hours ago
      Social media is being banned for minors in multiple countries, and more are seriously considering it.

      But if people keep proselytizing that nothing will happen and all is hopeless, it's going to be hard to get people together to support a change. You and others here are doing the work of social media companies by spreading that - on social media. In fact, nothing can stop the public if they want something.

  • buckwheatmilk 1 hour ago
    By now I reached a point where I don't believe that big tech companies will do anything to improve outcomes for user if it will have a hit on their bottom line, and I'm sure that opposite is true, they will do anything to improve their bottom line even if it hurts the user. So it's fair to say that this relationship can't work in long term.

    I'm not really on the platforms mentioned except of YouTube, and it's considered to be the lesser offender here but still I can't avoid seeing how bad it got.

    I remember 2007-2012 the platform was mostly for entertainment, silly cat videos pranks, a low budget documentary here and there. 2012-2015 felt like the period where YouTube became a platform for more useful things, people showing how they are fixing cars, professors uploading their recorded classes, history channels, but on the sidelines people were starting to make money off doing weird things, like unboxing stuff on camera, drop testing phones, etc.

    If you were told in early 2000's that people will be getting extremely rich by unpackaging products on camera, you would have been called insane, no one would have considered wasting their free time watching things like that. It might be more difficult to convince older folks to engage but younger generation was malleable and was easy to hook, and slowly it became normal.

    2015 to present days became a period where it's completely normal to make user to watch the ad disguised as content. People testing/showcasing/unboxing products or even political ideology propaganda presented as discussion in form of a podcast.

    It's obvious that the quality what is offered on YouTube has gotten worse, but they can counter it with autoplay, infinite scroll, landing page filled with eye grabbing content. The only way to watch things on YouTube and not be effected by this nonsense is to use a different client (freetube, jaybird, newpipe, there are plenty more). You can define of your homepage will look like, weather you want to see shorts or not, infinite feed, suggestion etc.

  • skirge 3 hours ago
    "make customer come back" - every (good) car dealer
  • RajT88 3 hours ago
    And why not? AAA game companies have been reported to have psychologists on staff to help make their games more addictive.

    We don't police big tobacco very well on making their products more addictive. We seem to be fine with expanding gambling - where I live (not Nevada!) slot machines are everywhere. Nice restaurants even will dedicate corners to slot machines - not just seedy bars. Sports betting apps are all over streaming ads, and their legality is expanding even though when they are legalized in an area the divorce and loan default rates go up measurably.

    Why would we regulate big tech if we don't bother with anything else?

    The kids are just the latest victim of a long ongoing trend.

    • michaelt 3 hours ago
      > Why would we regulate big tech if we don't bother with anything else?

      I’m pretty sure we do, in fact, ban under 18s from tobacco, alcohol, and real-money gambling.

      • sidrag22 3 hours ago
        > real-money gambling

        this is doing a lot of heavy lifting for how loose we have become with under 18 questionable products.

      • ghurtado 2 hours ago
        Not to mention strict limits on advertising of these products, licensing required to sell them, and very highly taxed.

        If that's not enough, in the US we created a federal level agency that oversees 3 things only. Two of those things are alcohol and tobacco. And the third thing isn't even regulated half as much as those two.

        Why on earth anyone thinks these things are unregulated is beyond me.

      • RajT88 2 hours ago
        Let's check in on how we're doing preventing the tobacco industry from marketing to children.

        Hmm, candy flavored vapes both for THC and nicotine. Teen psychosis from THC. Popcorn lung. Not so good it seems!

        https://www.lung.org/research/sotc/by-the-numbers/8-things-i...

      • mmooss 2 hours ago
        Just looking at the US, tobacco comes with warnings, there are limits on advertising (see any tobacco product commercials on TV?), and the manufacturers lost a lawsuit leading to massive fines and many of these outcomes.

        The idea that we don't regulate things would be shocking to the anti-regulation crowd, and the staffs at the FDA, FCC, etc.

    • jacquesm 3 hours ago
      > And why not?

      Because it is simply wrong.

      > AAA game companies have been reported to have psychologists on staff to help make their games more addictive. > We don't police big tobacco very well on making their products more addictive.

      Three wrongs don't make a right I guess.

      • RajT88 3 hours ago
        My exact point. Our current moment seems to be us being happy to expand societal harms for whatever reason. I'd hazard a guess it's our political system getting more and more susceptible to lobbying money.
    • malfist 3 hours ago
      This is defeatist. Just because something is bad doesn't mean we shouldn't care at all and just let everything be bad.
    • helterskelter 3 hours ago
      I know Doom Eternal had one, I believe she was even credited. But the line between "making a game more fun" and "making a game addictive" is a little blurry.
      • Izikiel43 2 hours ago
        Addictive in this case you mean could be out of spite? Like, I don't like this but it's pissing me off and by god I will beat it?
        • helterskelter 1 hour ago
          I found the gameplay loop really fun, but the rest of it was definitely not up to the standard of Doom 2016.
    • draw_down 3 hours ago
      [dead]
  • Shamar 4 hours ago
    The documents provide smoking-gun evidence that Meta, Google, Snap, and TikTok all purposefully designed their social media products to addict children and teens with no regard for known harms to their wellbeing, and how that mass youth addiction was core to the companies’ business models. The documents contain internal discussions among company employees, presentations from internal meetings, expert testimony, and evidence of Big Tech coordination with tech-funded groups, including the National Parent Teachers Association (PTA) and Family Online Safety Institute (FOSI), in attempts to control the narrative in response to concerned parents.

    “These unsealed documents prove Big Tech has been gaslighting and lying to the public for years

    • mahirsaid 3 hours ago
      Are people surprised by this. Clearly this was a tactic widely used in the tech industry. Their aim is to keep people on the platform specifically teens. Why else would you need curated algorithms for users.
      • idle_zealot 3 hours ago
        Anyone paying attention knew. A smoking gun means that legal action is possible. Or it would be in a better time.
        • mahirsaid 2 hours ago
          Indeed, I've been paying attention to the market share of the biggest companies in advertisement, its clear that Google and Meta are the largest share by a large margin. Almost not even comparable to other players other than Reddit recently. which it's exposure is dependent on Search engines like Google and Bing for that matter. users within the platform are a different story. I personally think the internet is not being utilized wisely when it comes to current context. There is still so much to be done and innovated and there are gate keepers keeping this from happening.
        • lostlogin 3 hours ago
          It might, but would that achieve much? Tobacco has done ok.
          • idle_zealot 1 hour ago
            Algorithmicly personalized social media becoming as stigmatized as smoking would be an amazing outcome, and is a great goal for regulators.
          • jmcgough 3 hours ago
            Tobacco paid billions of dollars, and we've heavily restricted where it can be used, where it can be advertised, and who can buy it.
          • ludicrousdispla 2 hours ago
            Companies don't necessarily have to suffer when restrictions are placed on them.

            Ask any educator what the biggest positive change was to U.S. high schools in the 1970s and they'll probably answer that it was the ban on smoking in schools.

            I expect a similar response in the future regarding bans on social media.

            • mahirsaid 2 hours ago
              I can only imagine what it's like right now in schools. I can't see how anybody arguing the point that student are allowed to use social media in school is an okay activity. I know there are some countries banning the use of such activities in Europe and some others i can't think of right now.
    • hansvm 3 hours ago
      How did that work mechanically though? At YT we were banned from doing basically anything with pre-18yo data, even if we only suspected they might possibly not be an adult -- no A/B tests, no ML, no ad targeting, no nada. Did leadership design a system where those sorts of things would happen anyway? Were there just enough rogue teams to cause problems?
      • jacquesm 3 hours ago
        Because the product is made to appeal to that particular demographic. The data doesn't really matter if you have that kind of reach.
      • worik 2 hours ago
        > At YT we were banned from doing basically anything with pre-18yo data

        I guess things are different at Google now.

      • iwontberude 3 hours ago
        For business, government, and religion: achieving scale and centralization necessarily leads to corrupt outcomes. This is also where Marx’s legitimate criticisms of capitalism turn into a solution which is essentially its doppelgänger, a scaled system of corruption with absolute authority with the rhetorical veneer of democracy.
  • jacquesm 3 hours ago
    All of these guys should end up behind bars. To purposefully prey on vulnerable kids like this, it is absolutely disgusting. And here I am as a parent trying to stem the floodgates against people wielding billions of $ and armies of programmers and psychologists to harm my kids. Fuck them. And if you work for them then...
  • miltonlost 3 hours ago
    I hope that all the engineers who went along with this are able to sleep well with their stock options.
  • pembrook 2 hours ago
    This reads like an Onion headline.

    Gosh, I hope the media never unearths the documents on my company.

    They’ll learn that keeping my customers coming back was also my top priority. The horror!

    If they dig a little deeper they might uncover a vast conspiracy, that every business on earth has been secretly conspiring for decades to give people a service so good they’ll come back again and again for it.

    If this isn’t Pulitzer Prize winning journalism I don’t know what is.

    • AlexandrB 2 hours ago
      > every business on earth has been secretly conspiring for decades to give people a service so good they’ll come back again and again for it

      You're out of touch. The modern approach is to give people a service just barely good enough so they don't leave outright and keep them coming back with fomo, clickbait, and pandering to their worldview. I doubt user satisfaction is even a column in a table at social media companies.

      Most services I use are worse than they were 10 years ago but make far more money.

      Edit:

      > They’ll learn that keeping my customers coming back was also my top priority. The horror!

      By the way, the customers here are not the users, they're the advertisers. The users are largely disposable eyeball inventory.

      • pembrook 2 hours ago
        Social media is a marketplace business. Both parties are your customer.
        • AlexandrB 2 hours ago
          Only one party is paying anything.
  • dxuh 2 hours ago
    I feel like this is ultimately uninteresting. This doesn't change anyone's image of these companies. We know they are evil. They have done worse and they will do worse. They never got a meaningful punishment and I have no reason to believe they will. All they get is outrage on the internet, which is effectively meaningless to them.

    The files being examined right now shows me that there is nothing bad enough to actually make anything happen, no matter how absurdly evil it is. Are we too easily distracted? Or are we too used to inhumanity now? Or are the powerful simply more powerful than most of the rest of the planet?

  • takklob 45 minutes ago
    These people need to be killed.