New Harvard Study Confirms Need for NY to Regulate Social Media and Protect Teens Online
Social media giants generated nearly $11 billion in ad revenue from kids and teens in 2022; Sen Gounardes talks to CBS2 about his bills: SAFE for Kids Act and the New York Child Data Protection Act
BROOKLYN, NY (01/12/2024) (readMedia)-- The Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health recently published the first known study that calculates social media advertising revenue from youth users, finding that social media platforms like Instagram and Tiktok collectively generated just short of $11 billion in ad revenue from users under 18 during 2022. Following Governor Kathy Hochul's State of the State address where she pledged her support for Senator Gounardes' legislation to protect children's data privacy and regulate addictive algorithms, this study underscores the significant financial incentive social media platforms have to keep teens online for long periods of time. Despite the endless studies that show increased rates of depression, anxiety, suicidal thoughts, and self-harm among children and teens due to increased social media use, social media companies have only created tools to keep them online for longer.
Watch Senator Gounardes on CBS New York Friday evening discussing his legislation to protect teens online.
"Big Tech wants us to think that they take internet safety seriously, but the truth is they have 11 billion reasons to keep serving our kids content about diet pills and suicide kits. Self-regulation is a fallacy: the only way we're going to reign in the for-profit industry that's getting rich off our kids is if we force them to. That's why I introduced the SAFE for Kids Act and the New York Child Data Protection Act, and why the industry is going to spend millions this session to beat us. Don't be fooled, Big Tech is not your friend," said New York State Senator Andrew Gounardes.
For more details on the legislation, visit keepkidssafeonlineny.com.
Key findings from the Harvard study include:
- In 2022, YouTube had 49.7 million U.S.-based users under age 18; TikTok, 18.9 million; Snapchat, 18 million; Instagram, 16.7 million; Facebook, 9.9 million; and X, 7 million.
- Social platforms collectively generated nearly $11 billion in ad revenue from these users:
- $2.1 billion from users ages 12 and under
- $8.6 billion from users ages 13-17.
- Instagram derived the greatest ad revenue from users ages 13-17 ($4 billion), followed by TikTok ($2 billion) and YouTube ($1.2 billion).
Click here to read an in-depth summary of the study.
In her State of the State address earlier this week, Governor Hochul prioritized protecting the mental health and well-being of children on social media, calling it the "defining challenge of our time." Governor Hochul specifically identified the Stop Addictive Feeds Exploitation for Kids Act (SAFE) and the New York Child Data Protection Act as part of her legislative agenda. Both sponsored by State Senator Andrew Gounardes and Assemblymember Nily Rozic, the bills prohibit social media companies from using addictive algorithm feeds and data collection on their users under the age of 18.
According to recent research, half of teens say social media makes them feel worse about their body image, social media use leads to disrupted sleep cycles, and youth who spend more than three hours a day on social media double their risk for depression and anxiety: the average for overall Internet use is almost nine hours a day, not including time for homework.
The Stop Addictive Feeds Exploitation for Kids Act (SAFE) and the New York Child Data Protection Act, both very feasible regulations, aim to create critical protections for children and young adults online by restricting the collection of their personal data and changing how young users are served content online to reduce the harms of addictive features that keep children on social media longer.
BACKGROUND:
Bill #1: Stop Addictive Feeds Exploitation (SAFE) for Kids Act
This SAFE for Kids Act will require social media companies to restrict the addictive features on their platforms that most harm young users. Currently, platforms supplement the content that users view from the accounts they follow by serving them additional content from accounts they do not follow or subscribe to. This content is curated using algorithms that gather and display content based on a variety of factors. However, algorithmic feeds have been shown to be addictive because they prioritize content that keeps users on the platform longer. Addictive feeds are correlated with an increase in the amount of time that teens and young adults spend on social media and significant negative mental health outcomes for minors.
To address this problem, the legislation will:
- Ban social media platforms from offering addictive feeds to any persons under 18 without parental consent. Instead, users will receive a chronological feed of content from only the users that they already follow or feeds of generally popular content – the same way that social media feeds functioned before the advent of addictive feeds. Users may also search for specific topics of interest.
- Prohibit social media platforms from sending notifications to minors from 12AM and 6AM without verifiable parental consent.
- Allow users and parents to opt out of minors accessing social media platforms between the hours of 12AM and 6AM.
- Authorize the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) to bring an action to enjoin or seek damages or civil penalties of up to $5,000 per violation. Allow any parent/guardian of a covered minor to sue for damages of up to $500 per user per incident, or actual damages, whichever is greater.
This legislation will only impact social media platforms with feeds comprised of user-generated content along with other material that the platform recommends to users based on data it collects from them. For example, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, and YouTube would all be subject to this legislation.
Bill #2: The New York Child Data Protection Act
With few privacy protections in place for minors online, children are vulnerable to having their location and other personal data tracked and shared with third parties. To protect children's privacy, the New York Child Data Protection Act will prohibit all online sites from collecting, using, sharing, or selling personal data of anyone under the age of 18 for the purposes of advertising, unless they receive informed consent or unless doing so is strictly necessary for the purpose of the website. For users under 13, this informed consent must come from a parent. The bill authorizes the Office of the Attorney General to enforce the law and may enjoin, seek damages, or civil penalties of up to $5,000 per violation.
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