Such content is often riddled with visual flaws and inconsistencies that could negatively affect young viewers ...
In many US classrooms, the day now runs on YouTube. That's the picture the Wall Street Journal draws, starting with a Kansas ...
Google Assistant is already another handy way to distract the kids, and now Australian superstars The Wiggles are making ...
We don’t outsource public health to individual families. And make no mistake: The potential developmental harms of AI slop ...
Manitoba Premier Wab Kinew announced the proposed ban at an April fundraiser, arguing that tech platforms are “doing these ...
In Mufarreh v. Google, Inc., decided Friday by the Illinois Appellate Court (Justice Raymond Mitchell, joined by Justices Sharon ...
If you were a preschooler watching YouTube in 2017, perhaps you were having holes drilled in your still-developing brain by ...
The potential developmental harms of AI slop are a public health concern and need more than parental controls.
Parents find their kids captive to the video streaming site on their school-issued devices; for one, it was 13,000 YouTube ...
In her engaging, sympathetic book “Like, Follow, Subscribe,” the journalist Fortesa Latifi digs into growing up in the spotlight.
A new wave of AI-generated YouTube videos aimed at toddlers and preschoolers are raising concerns among child development experts and advocates who say it could harm early childhood development.
Taken together, these four features can create a trancelike state that can keep us stuck on social media apps or video games for hours. Children are particularly vulnerable.