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“How kid tech companies navigate COPPA and GDPR regulations”
...US called COPPA, which is the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act. And then GDPR, there's a part of GDPR, which essentially is article eight eighteen. And,
...US called COPPA, which is the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act. And then GDPR, there's a part of GDPR, which essentially is article eight eighteen. And, essentially, that says that people under the age of 13 and maybe 16 in other territories
I'm very excited about both these companies. One more tiny story that I wanted to slip in here before we get to Cake Equity and this is that Texas's attorney general Ken Paxton is suing not only character AI, but 14 other technology companies names l
difficult for people to understand. If you are going to engage in adult discussions with these powerful technologies, just do an age verification. We need to have a global age verification system that is run, in an opt in way by the two major platfor
the how great these things are, giving people a false sense of security that they should blindly rely on them. And so maybe they'll just start giving more disclaimers. And I I was talking to some friends over dinner about this when the story broke, a
two governments that I would not normally talk about in the same sentence, have started enforcing age verification laws that essentially say that if you're gonna show any kind of adult content, you need to verify the age of the user and not just by h
...tries to do with purpose limitation or purpose specificity. So when you consent to those cookie dialogues, which are all misregulated, mismanaged, and nonsense, I'm not defending them. And GDPR, like all regulations, is full of unintended consequence
that, I expect them to take action here, and I want to see them for the first time in their lives as a company to take proactive action to protect our children. Yes, Zuckerberg. Three people sent this to you. You can all guess his email. Just put it
Facebook had just been, I mean, playing way too fast and loose with user privacy for years, and it had finally caught up with them by 2011. And And just to jog your memories, I'm sure people may remember a lot of these, some of these included even th
...And GDPR, like all regulations, is full of unintended consequences. What they're trying to do is say, do you consent to let a tracking cookie be set, let's say, for some essential or inessential reason? And there are carve outs for essential reasons.
and so for for for cases of, like, fiction or research. And so the the guiding principle is treat adults like adults. And, again, he sort of touched on this in the Tucker Carlson interview, but it it was a little bit of bumbling. On the topic of teen
that just said to parents, when you see this good housekeeping seal of approval, it means your kids, if they have their iPhone set up properly, because you can set up kids' accounts on iPhones, the parents the kid can ask to install Instagram. The pa
everyone knows us as the company that is, a little bit dodgy on privacy practices. Like, at least the public perception is this, that they're constantly Changing the terms of the game, shall we say. Yes. To the company's advantage when it was confusi
can they actually just use their resources and their reach to beat out open AI and anthropic and perplexity here? It is a fascinating moment for antitrust law, though. I'm sure we'll look back on this in five years and say either that was very presci
site. We're on TVs. Like, you shouldn't have to prove that you're of age to watch YouTube. But, they're they're making them. As far as I know, that they're still making them do it. So that's an example of putting a huge onus on companies that wanna o
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