I had an interesting exchange of thoughts about this topic over on !reddit@lemmy.ml
I had an interesting exchange of thoughts about this topic over on !reddit@lemmy.ml
Someone mentioned invoking GDPR’s right to be forgotten. Although comments are not strictly personal information, it could still work. I think I’ll try it soon.
What would possibly be the consequences for either parent or child if they violate?
If the law designed is any good, there should be none. The responsibility to check whether the parent has agreed should be laid on the social media giants, not the child or the parent. It should be a tool for parents to control the social media consumption of their kids. And after reading the article, which I highly recommend, it seems to be the case:
The broad law comes with heavy burdens for online platforms. It requires basically any digital services provider that collects an email at sign-up to conduct age verification to identify all minors, verify parents or guardians connected to all minors identified, and secure parental consent for a wide range of account activity.
Please read the articles that you post. Asking follow-up questions that are already answered is a little stupid.
I think that the combination of a relatively new platform and lower amount of content is to blame. On Reddit algorithms had a lot more to work with and they constantly removed the posts you’ve already seen from your feed. I would love to see both of those things change. Maybe a new, more aggressive, algorithm is needed.
Good b… Oh wait, we need more useful bots on Lemmy
What do you guys think of buying Cyberpunk 2077? I’ve been waiting for it to improve before buying, and with the dlc around the corner, and generally good opinions it seems like a great time to buy.
Edit: Just bought it together with the DLC, thanks for the recommendations!
In programming community it’s a well-known issue. Mostly because programmers often use reddit, but also because of the API discussions. A popular programming YouTuber - Fireship did a video on the topic.
There’s an excellent style available through userstyles that might make the experience more bearable. If you have some technical skill and time, you could make one that looks and behaves as old.reddit. I expect something like that will appear soon there as I hear more and more complaints about the UI.
What’s the benefit of doing this apart from a technical challenge and fun? Such a server wouldn’t support the network in any way, right?
Interesting, I wonder how does decentralized nature of fetching data from other instances affect this. Thanks for providing the reference! Will look into it.
We are very competitive gamers, so the list is:
When there are more players: