Researchers found that teens can discover harmful content, connect with unknown adults and easily bypass time limits.
The focus should be on sensible legislation that requires companies to make their products safer and more age-appropriate ...
Inquirer Opinion on MSNOpinion
Time to follow suit
Ban teenagers and children from social media? Once upon a time, when the world was still enthralled by the possibilities ...
Australia is not the first country to try to regulate children’s presence on social media. But research shows it’s hard to ...
No lunch served today. Children’s Clothing Bank — 3 to 6 p.m., free good condition clothes for children age infant to 12, ...
The House-passed legislation stops short of demands in the Senate to impose a legal requirement on tech companies, such as ...
Australia is not the first country to try to regulate children’s presence on social media. But research shows it’s hard to ...
House leaders quietly released a 115-page package called the KIDS Act. The title sounds reassuring. The politics behind it ...
As discussed in a previous article "Move it or lose it," if we are not working to prevent bone density loss, we can become ...
Emerging research suggests overusing digital devices can be harmful, especially to mental health. But does being overly online truly rot our brains?
The whistleblower who exposed social media’s dangers to teenagers says the next major legal battle will be against the AI friends that minors interact with ...
"RN here, taking care of a patient who stopped taking her blood pressure meds and started taking TikTok supplements instead.
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