Prøve GULL - Gratis
SENATE TO CONSIDER BILLS THAT AIM TO PROTECT CHILDREN AND TEENAGERS ONLINE
Techlife News
|July 27, 2024
The Senate will consider legislation this week that aims to protect children from dangerous online content, moving forward with what could become the first sweeping new regulation of the tech industry in decades.
-

Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced Tuesday that he will bring the bipartisan bill up in the Senate, with hopes of passing it before the chamber leaves for its August recess. The legislation had stalled for months even as more than two-thirds of the Senate signed on to support it and families of children who have suffered online bullying and harm advocated for its passage.
Schumer said on the Senate floor that the bill is “personal” for him after meeting in recent months with parents of children who died by suicide after they were harassed online, targeted by predators or had their information stolen. The parent advocates say social media and other tech companies need to do more to try to help prevent trauma endured by children and teenagers who inevitably spend a lot of their time online.
“Social media has helped hundreds of millions of people connect in new ways over the last two decades,” Schumer said. “But there are also new and sometimes serious health risks that come along with those benefits. We cannot set these risks aside. On this issue, we desperately need to catch up.”
The online safety bill, which the Senate will consider along with a separate bill to update child online privacy laws, would be the first major tech regulation package to move in years. While there has long been bipartisan support for the idea that the biggest technology companies should face more government scrutiny, there has been little consensus on how it should be done. Congress passed legislation earlier this year that would force Chinese-owned social media company TikTok to sell or face a ban, but that law only targets one company.
Denne historien er fra July 27, 2024-utgaven av Techlife News.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Techlife News

Techlife News
2026 PORSCHE CAYENNE EV SUV TO FEATURE WIRELESS CHARGING, JUST LIKE A SMARTPHONE
Porsche is preparing to launch its next-generation Cayenne EV SUV in 2026, and one of its standout features will be the ability to charge wirelessly—much like placing a smartphone on a charging pad.
1 mins
September 06, 2025

Techlife News
JUDGE REJECTS REQUEST TO BREAK UP GOOGLE IN LANDMARK ANTITRUST CASE, SHIFTING FOCUS TO BEHAVIORAL REMEDIES
A U.S. federal judge has rejected calls from regulators and rival companies to break up Google, dealing a significant blow to one of the most consequential antitrust cases of the modern tech era.
4 mins
September 06, 2025

Techlife News
META HIRES APPLE'S ROBOTICS AI LEAD AS THREE MORE SIRI RESEARCHERS EXIT CUPERTINO
Meta has recruited Ruslan Salakhutdinov, Apple's director of robotics Al, marking another high-profile defection from Cupertino as the company accelerates its own push into advanced artificial intelligence.
2 mins
September 06, 2025

Techlife News
DOLBY VISION 2 IS COMING BUT YOUR TV ISN'T OBSOLETE JUST YET
Dolby Laboratories is preparing to launch Dolby Vision 2, the next generation of its premium high dynamic range (HDR) format, promising sharper contrast, more accurate colors, and improved performance on future displays.
3 mins
September 06, 2025
Techlife News
EMPLOYEES ARE BRINGING THEIR OWN AI TOOLS TO WORK, LEAVING COMPANIES SCRAMBLING TO CATCH UP
From ChatGPT and Claude to MidJourney and GitHub Copilot, artificial intelligence tools are rapidly finding their way into offices, classrooms, and factories-often not through official company rollouts, but through employees adopting them on their own. The result is a growing divide between how workers are already using AI to do their jobs and how employers are struggling to regulate, secure, and integrate these tools into existing systems.
2 mins
September 06, 2025

Techlife News
APPLE DROPS MLS SEASON PASS PRICE TO $29 FOR REST OF 2025 IN PUSH TO BOOST SOCCER STREAMING
Apple has cut the price of its MLS Season Pass subscription to $29 for the remainder of 2025, slashing the cost in an aggressive move to expand its soccer streaming audience.
2 mins
September 06, 2025

Techlife News
MING-CHI KUO CASTS DOUBT ON KEY RUMORS SURROUNDING APPLE'S FOLDABLE IPHONE, SAYS DEVICE 'UNLIKELY' TO FEATURE EXPECTED TECHNOLOGY
The highly anticipated foldable iPhone, expected to arrive in 2026, has been the subject of a steady stream of leaks and speculation.
3 mins
September 06, 2025

Techlife News
WINDOWS 10 END-OF-SUPPORT PUTS SPAIN AT RISK, WITH MORE THAN HALF OF COMPUTERS STILL RUNNING THE OS
Spain faces a looming digital security crisis as Microsoft prepares to end support for Windows 10 in October 2025.
3 mins
September 06, 2025

Techlife News
OPENAI ACQUIRES STATSIG FOR $1.1 BILLION, BRINGING CEO ONBOARD TO LEAD APPLICATIONS STRATEGY
OpenAl has announced the acquisition of Statsig, a fast-growing product experimentation and feature management startup, in a deal valued at $1.1 billion. The move signals OpenAl's intent to strengthen its ability to build and scale consumer-facing applications powered by its AI models, while also expanding its leadership team with Statsig's CEO Vijaye Raji, who will join OpenAl as an executive overseeing applications.
2 mins
September 06, 2025

Techlife News
OPENAI TO BUILD INDIA DATA CENTER WITH AT LEAST 1GW CAPACITY AS GLOBAL AI INFRASTRUCTURE EXPANDS
OpenAl is preparing to establish a massive data center in India with an initial planned capacity of at least one gigawatt, according to people familiar with the project.
3 mins
September 06, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size