conception
7 hours ago
This thread is person after person saying “oh wow, person who sells terrible thing for humanity doesn’t let their kids have unlimited access to terrible thing! It’s so obvious. This isn’t news.”
The news is that the CEO of youtube is saying that Youtube is something that should be limited and he thinks harm will come to his children if he does not. This may be obvious to people on this site but a lot of normal people think it’s fine. It’s shocking as for a lot of people it’s more like “CEO of cucumber farm limits cucumbers for their child!” As that’s how Google markets youtube for kids.
dachris
7 hours ago
Lots of normal people don't think it's fine.
Lots of parents limited their kids' TV (television, you know) time back in the day (mine sure did, thanks mum and dad, even though I didn't particularly approve of the restriction back then).
Now you have to limit smartphone (and tablet and PC and TV) time. Lots of parents do this already, CEOs are not alone.
Gud
6 hours ago
The television set was never in every kids pocket, though. And obviously "lol don't buy your kid a smartphone then lol". sure, easy to say, but the world is getting more and more connected.
danielbarla
3 hours ago
Availability is definitely a factor, but I feel that a far more important aspect is that a YouTube feel is personalised. It's A/B testing you for weeks on end, and has a pretty good idea of how to get maximum engagement. TV was never this targeted, nor was there feedback to ratchet up what it suggested to you.
Forgeties79
2 hours ago
Kids don’t stand a chance against decades of data/research and billions of dollars weaponized against human psychology to garner as much of your attention as possible at all times.
codedokode
an hour ago
Kids should own a device with "adult" bit set to 0, so that they can only use government-approved applications and sites. Why government? Because parents are too lazy or dumb to configure anything and 90% will just let their children access whatever they want and the rest 10% will feel like losers who cannot watch the things all their classmates are allowed to watch.
Gud
2 hours ago
By our generations “best and brightest”, supposedly.
At least, most well compensated.
Shame on you, if you work for these organisations.
kjkjadksj
3 hours ago
Plus a lot of the times there was nothing interesting to watch on TV even if you did have it in front of you.
dmix
7 hours ago
To me it seems like basic parenting to limit access to tech.
It wasn’t healthy for kids to just play video games every day for 5hrs straight after school in the 90s either. But that also doesn’t mean they should never have had a PlayStation or all gaming is bad.
just_once
7 hours ago
Hacker News is not representative of the average person in often very bad ways.
2OEH8eoCRo0
7 hours ago
It's also person after person telling people to parent harder.
irl_zebra
7 hours ago
It's a responsibility, probably (definitely, I think, but minimally probably) the most important job and responsibility one can have. If you're on HN, then you likely recognize the brain rotting effect of social media without moderation, and if that's the case, your responsibility is to parent to the minimum amount that you moderate your kids' usage.
2OEH8eoCRo0
6 hours ago
Yep. And people parent harder by banning social media entirely. Problem solved!
bdangubic
6 hours ago
this is exactly what hard parenting is all about. I do “as long as you under my roof…” bit (6 more years to go…) :)
2OEH8eoCRo0
6 hours ago
I think the problem is that parents don't know that it's bad so they don't limit but this CEO apparently knows! Many parents are addicts themselves
dzhiurgis
3 hours ago
So you kinda saying youtube for kids should limit itself to N hours per day per IP address / device?
Perhaps australia should’ve implemented such limitations. Burden of enforcement on big tech since the have billions to spend anyway.
naian
7 hours ago
I doubt “a lot of people” think spending all day watching YouTube is fine; this sounds hyperbolic.
conception
2 hours ago
Studies on screen time with toddlers and infants don’t paint a rosy picture on it.