this post was submitted on 17 Sep 2024
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Meta's has been listening to some concerns after all especially now after some pressure.

These changes very well could help parents moderate their teens. Meta's head of product says these changes address particular 3 concerns in an Npr interview.

Will this be the end of the complaints and concerns geared towards Instagram, probably not.

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[โ€“] cm0002@lemmy.world 9 points 1 month ago (1 children)

It works well...when a parent makes an account for the express purpose of parental controls. The "issue" are the fake accounts (i.e. "finstas") that the kids make themselves in which they lie about their age.

Also, side note, Googles child accounts work OK, I would not say they've got it on lock. Did you know if you get your kids a debit card and they're under 13 Google will NOT allow them to add it as their own payment method no matter what consent I'm willing to give to them?

Yea, I had to do a parent sanctioned age-lie to Google so now Google thinks my kids are all 13+ just so I could do the extreme thing of teaching them money responsibilities in an age of digital transactions SMDH

Because they won't need to figure stuff out on their own to the same degree.

Lol they will the second they get hit with that "you need to get parental consent" screen, that's how it happened to us all.

Lol they will the second they get hit with that "you need to get parental consent" screen, that's how it happened to us all.

The normie services are increasingly tied to real world identities, through verification methods that involve phone numbers and often government-issued IDs. As the regulatory requirements tighten on these services, it'll be increasingly more difficult to create anonymous/alt accounts. Just because it was easy to anonymously create a new Gmail or a new Instagram account 10 years ago doesn't mean it's easy today. It's a common complaint that things like an Oculus requires a Meta account that requires some tedious verification.

I don't think it'll ever be perfect, but it will probably be enough for the network effects of these types of services to be severely dampened (and then a feedback loop where the difficult-to-use-as-a-teen services have too much friction and aren't being used, so nobody else feels it is worth the effort to set up). Especially if teens' parent-supervised accounts are locked to their devices, in an increasingly cloud-reliant hardware world.