Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Source: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/montgomery-county-public-schools-join-federal-lawsuit-against-social-media-companies-301850333.html
Frantz Law Group announces that the Montgomery County Public School District joined 500 school districts nationwide in a lawsuit filed in Federal District Court in San Francisco against Meta, TikTok, Snap, YouTube, and other social media companies. In the lawsuit the plaintiff school districts allege that these companies are knowingly causing emotional harm to children through their platforms.
With over 160,550 students in 210 schools, the Montgomery County Public School District is the largest school district in the state of Maryland. The lawsuit alleges that various social media companies have caused a mental and emotional health crisis marked by higher proportions of anxiety, depression, thoughts of self-harm, body dissatisfaction, disordered eating behaviors, and low self-esteem among children and students. Many are further subjected to often harmful, exploitative and addictive content that encourages disorderly behavior, unhealthy social comparison, and cyberbullying. This litigation seeks to provide the funding and staffing resources needed to mitigate the damage that school districts are currently encountering.
Good for MCPS! It's time we all held social media companies accounting for the harm their platforms and algorithms have unleashed on our youth.
What does "hold social media companies accountable" consist of, in your mind?
Better government regulation, which forces social media companies to enforce its age restrictions (no users under 13), adjust its algorithms to limit disinformation and/or anonymous bad actors from preying on children and overall, much more specific and effective government oversight and regulation along the lines of what is in place for radio and TV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Source: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/montgomery-county-public-schools-join-federal-lawsuit-against-social-media-companies-301850333.html
Frantz Law Group announces that the Montgomery County Public School District joined 500 school districts nationwide in a lawsuit filed in Federal District Court in San Francisco against Meta, TikTok, Snap, YouTube, and other social media companies. In the lawsuit the plaintiff school districts allege that these companies are knowingly causing emotional harm to children through their platforms.
With over 160,550 students in 210 schools, the Montgomery County Public School District is the largest school district in the state of Maryland. The lawsuit alleges that various social media companies have caused a mental and emotional health crisis marked by higher proportions of anxiety, depression, thoughts of self-harm, body dissatisfaction, disordered eating behaviors, and low self-esteem among children and students. Many are further subjected to often harmful, exploitative and addictive content that encourages disorderly behavior, unhealthy social comparison, and cyberbullying. This litigation seeks to provide the funding and staffing resources needed to mitigate the damage that school districts are currently encountering.
Good for MCPS! It's time we all held social media companies accounting for the harm their platforms and algorithms have unleashed on our youth.
What does "hold social media companies accountable" consist of, in your mind?
Anonymous wrote:Source: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/montgomery-county-public-schools-join-federal-lawsuit-against-social-media-companies-301850333.html
Frantz Law Group announces that the Montgomery County Public School District joined 500 school districts nationwide in a lawsuit filed in Federal District Court in San Francisco against Meta, TikTok, Snap, YouTube, and other social media companies. In the lawsuit the plaintiff school districts allege that these companies are knowingly causing emotional harm to children through their platforms.
With over 160,550 students in 210 schools, the Montgomery County Public School District is the largest school district in the state of Maryland. The lawsuit alleges that various social media companies have caused a mental and emotional health crisis marked by higher proportions of anxiety, depression, thoughts of self-harm, body dissatisfaction, disordered eating behaviors, and low self-esteem among children and students. Many are further subjected to often harmful, exploitative and addictive content that encourages disorderly behavior, unhealthy social comparison, and cyberbullying. This litigation seeks to provide the funding and staffing resources needed to mitigate the damage that school districts are currently encountering.
Good for MCPS! It's time we all held social media companies accounting for the harm their platforms and algorithms have unleashed on our youth.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If MCPS would actually enforce school phone policies instead of just passing the buck to teachers, I could support them. So many kids are addicted to their devices and can flip out if they are confiscated.
Or, parents could parent.
Anonymous wrote:If MCPS would actually enforce school phone policies instead of just passing the buck to teachers, I could support them. So many kids are addicted to their devices and can flip out if they are confiscated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If MCPS would actually enforce school phone policies instead of just passing the buck to teachers, I could support them. So many kids are addicted to their devices and can flip out if they are confiscated.
Or, parents could parent.
Anonymous wrote:Source: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/montgomery-county-public-schools-join-federal-lawsuit-against-social-media-companies-301850333.html
Frantz Law Group announces that the Montgomery County Public School District joined 500 school districts nationwide in a lawsuit filed in Federal District Court in San Francisco against Meta, TikTok, Snap, YouTube, and other social media companies. In the lawsuit the plaintiff school districts allege that these companies are knowingly causing emotional harm to children through their platforms.
With over 160,550 students in 210 schools, the Montgomery County Public School District is the largest school district in the state of Maryland. The lawsuit alleges that various social media companies have caused a mental and emotional health crisis marked by higher proportions of anxiety, depression, thoughts of self-harm, body dissatisfaction, disordered eating behaviors, and low self-esteem among children and students. Many are further subjected to often harmful, exploitative and addictive content that encourages disorderly behavior, unhealthy social comparison, and cyberbullying. This litigation seeks to provide the funding and staffing resources needed to mitigate the damage that school districts are currently encountering.
Good for MCPS! It's time we all held social media companies accounting for the harm their platforms and algorithms have unleashed on our youth.
Anonymous wrote:If MCPS would actually enforce school phone policies instead of just passing the buck to teachers, I could support them. So many kids are addicted to their devices and can flip out if they are confiscated.
Anonymous wrote:If MCPS would actually enforce school phone policies instead of just passing the buck to teachers, I could support them. So many kids are addicted to their devices and can flip out if they are confiscated.
Frantz Law Group announces that the Montgomery County Public School District joined 500 school districts nationwide in a lawsuit filed in Federal District Court in San Francisco against Meta, TikTok, Snap, YouTube, and other social media companies. In the lawsuit the plaintiff school districts allege that these companies are knowingly causing emotional harm to children through their platforms.
With over 160,550 students in 210 schools, the Montgomery County Public School District is the largest school district in the state of Maryland. The lawsuit alleges that various social media companies have caused a mental and emotional health crisis marked by higher proportions of anxiety, depression, thoughts of self-harm, body dissatisfaction, disordered eating behaviors, and low self-esteem among children and students. Many are further subjected to often harmful, exploitative and addictive content that encourages disorderly behavior, unhealthy social comparison, and cyberbullying. This litigation seeks to provide the funding and staffing resources needed to mitigate the damage that school districts are currently encountering.