Utah became the latest state Tuesday to file a lawsuit against TikTok, alleging the company is “baiting” children into addictive and unhealthy social media habits.

TikTok lures children into hours of social media use, misrepresents the app’s safety and deceptively portrays itself as independent of its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, Utah claims in the lawsuit.

“We will not stand by while these companies fail to take adequate, meaningful action to protect our children. We will prevail in holding social media companies accountable by any means necessary,” Republican Gov. Spencer Cox said at a news conference announcing the lawsuit, which was filed in state court in Salt Lake City.

    • Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I dunno, if they get a ruling here with a big enough splash this might actually spread to them too.

      It’ll all depend on if they can establish a solid enough case centered around the addictive nature of the content presentation algorithm, and getting it banned in favor of something like chronological content ordering.

  • Number1SummerJam@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’ve seen it with my own eyes. My SO’s younger sisters are 13 and spend all day glued to tiktok, Youtube shorts etc. I’ve seen the weird challenges encouraging dangerous behavior that the media hypes up show up in their feed (of mostly drama videos doxing strangers on the internet), as well as random videos of dead cats, gore, fentanyl references, and they’ve complained about videos of topless underage girls in 3rd world countries. Even though I’m politically across the aisle from these people, I support this lawsuit.

    • Birdie@thelemmy.club
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      1 year ago

      But whose responsibility is it to monitor their internet access? Mom and Dad need to step up and actually parent their children!

      • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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        As a young geek in the 90s, I know that kids can outsmart their parents easily. Most parents aren’t tech savvy but their kids are. A parent would literally have to sit there next to them and monitor every webpage and conversation they have, which isn’t realistic most of the time.

        We all know that social media sites like Facebook and Instagram have a negative impact on those that aren’t adults (it still sucks for adults too, but in a different way), and sites like TikTok and other video shorts essentially promote short attention spans and maximize the “reward” (dopamine) that users get.

        Social media sites are virtual Skinner Boxes.

      • ALostInquirer@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        But whose responsibility is it to monitor their internet access? Mom and Dad need to step up and actually parent their children!

        Yeah…Isn’t this likely unconstitutional given the first amendment? This strikes me as somewhat similar to attempts to regulate video games “for making children violent” or the like. At best this may result in TikTok releasing a children’s variation of the app with greater restrictions in terms of use and content, supposing something like that doesn’t already exist.

        Similar to how YouTube has a variation of their app for children, if I remember right.

        • Kale@lemmy.zip
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          At some point, the US made it illegal to grow or consume a plant. That seems like it would be impossible to handle legally, but it was made into law.

          If objective guidelines can be made on what constitutes damaging behavior, it’s possible that it could have legal ground to stand on. I hate tiktok because it takes away so much of my wife’s time. I play Xbox, though, so it’s not like I don’t have habits that eat up time. I remember my grandma complaining about my grandad fishing. She said she saw him more before he retired.

        • CoderKat@lemm.ee
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          Yeah, the only difference from the violent video games thing is that people on sites like this one hate tik tok (or any other social media except the one they use) and like video games.

          Like, what, they made their app too entertaining? That comment about their sibling spending all day on tik tok is exactly what many people do with video games. But I bet if you say “we’re gonna ban any video game that’s too fun because you’ll play them all day”, then all the tik tok haters will be like “but that’s different!”

    • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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      Yeah, it’s definitely addictive. My neighbor has 3 “tweenage” (10-12) daughters and they’re addicted to it, but then again Facebook is and was just as bad back in the mid 2000s. In college my girlfriend couldn’t go more than about 10 minutes (literally) without checking Facebook back in like 2009.

      If you’re around my age (37) and you had access to the internet in the 90s, you definitely saw way more fucked up stuff as a kid (The Stile Project, Rotten.com, etc…). We weren’t emotionally and mentally manipulated like the current younger generation is though, which is definitely fucked up. So, like you, I reluctantly support this as well.

      • Zahille7@lemmy.world
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        I mean I know plenty of adults that are a tuslly addicted to tiktok as well.

        Granted they aren’t actually doing anything wrong

    • ChickenLadyLovesLife@lemmy.world
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      My teenaged niece and nephew are hopelessly addicted to TikTok. My brother and sister-in-law (who are in their 40s/50s) decided to deal with the problem by also becoming hopelessly addicted to TikTok.

    • TenderfootGungi@lemmy.world
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      While I am sure this is true, wouldn’t conservatives want this to fall on parents instead of regulations?

      • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        You seem confused, let me explain:

        The conservative philosophy isn’t “you can’t tell people what to do,” it’s “You can’t tell me what to do. I can tell you what to do.”

    • stolid_agnostic@lemmy.ml
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      I think you support people being better parents more than you support a state curtailing the right to free speech.

    • SCB@lemmy.world
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      Lol did you feel this level of pearl-clutching about yourself being exposed to the internet?

      Watching people grapple with the “TV is rotting kids brains” of various generations never stops being equally funny and sad.

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    Utah. Sacred home of the Mormon cult. Is suing, unironically I might add, for the above reasons…

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    Can TikTok sue the Mormon church for “baiting” children into addictive and unhealthy habits?

        • Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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          You think they couldn’t blackmail Mormons? They will have more leverage than Atlas to rock their world before their afternoon audit.

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          One ok-to-good one, a solid second season, and then like 10 seasons of dragging the premise out long enough that the later seasons are a different genre, there has been 3 musical episodes, and a pretty racist allegorical twist that reveals the real enemy was another religious group that is part of an arc that never has a payoff for the final season.

          The movie will air on Tubi and will be a prequel that is basically unwatchable unless you have seen all 12 seasons and 100%'d the lootbox mobile game that is exclusive to the Sony Xperia Pro II in Guam and West Taiwan.

          There will be an ARG before the pilot airs. Don’t bother trying to play it, you won’t figure it out before the kids whose parents have a multicolored puzzle pieces sticker on their car.

    • Pandemanium@lemm.ee
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      Fun fact, back in the 80s, cigarette companies owned most of the food production companies. They are responsible for creating most of the addictive natural and artificial flavorings. When they got slapped for making cigarettes addictive, they quickly sold off all their food holdings because they didn’t want to be held financially responsible for making those addictive too.

    • Synnr@sopuli.xyz
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      It won’t, but that’s not the point. Gov. Spencer Cox is campaigning. Ever notice how politicians get real busy and start hitting hard with stuff like this when election season is near?

    • toiletobserver@lemmy.world
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      I think it could be regulated to a positive effect. We regulate all sorts of things that are addictive, see gambling and substances. We also regulate speech on broadcast TV and radio. And, children should be given elevated protections to data harvesting which is what these companies are really doing. Do i expect the government to fuck this up? Absolutely, but don’t let people hide behind first amendment bullshit to avoid the conversation.

  • JokeDeity@lemm.ee
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    Downvote me all you want, but this is the way. That shit needs banned or some extreme restrictions need to be implemented. IMO it’s literally dumbing down our entire country.

        • Lightor@lemmy.world
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          And who decides that. And who decides what is classified as “social media”? Once you give the govt this power they will be able to use to pretty liberally.

          • CoderKat@lemm.ee
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            All websites where you can post comments and all multiplayer video games are social media to some degree. And would become so to an even more degree if you ever somehow magically banned kids from more mainstream sites (which is a comical pipe dream that might actually make the sites more appealing).

            So basically, they’re proposing the internet be blocked for minors. No, they don’t actually mean that. You see, they want the sites they dislike to be blocked. Like Facebook. But not the things they use like Lemmy. You see, they’re better than you, so the things they like are okay. It’s just the things you like that are dumb and harmful.

  • Greyghoster@aussie.zone
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    Chinese parent company stands out here. Not sure what that has to do with parental controls and excessive time spent unless they are alleging that the Chinese government is trying to waste Utah kids time.

  • Killercat103@infosec.pub
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    I hope they win. I mean TikTok is not the only one. Not even close. But I hate platforms like these and would like to see some backlash.

    • Lightor@lemmy.world
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      So we should have the government shut down things we don’t like? Can no one see how this is a bit of a slippery slope, establishing this pattern. What if they decide lemmy needs to go and use the same reasoning.

    • alsu2launda@lemmy.world
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      Nothing will happen, a notice will be issued and TikTok won’t give a fuck. Don’t forget it is literally owned by CCP. Why would it fear some US state.

      • Edgelord_Of_Tomorrow@lemmy.world
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        The same reason NY and California can make a law and the entire industry shifts to comply? If you get banned in Utah it won’t be long before the rest of the US.

  • flipht@kbin.social
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    They can sue a company doing the corporate media thing very successfully, because it doesn’t directly fund them…but they can’t hold gun manufacturers, oil and gas companies, etc. accountable for actual harmful effects.

    Is social media good? Hell no. But it isn’t illegal. These kids can literally work in factories again, be married off to pedos, and these people are faking outrage to distract from all of that.