> I'm not sure fining a company billions of dollars and putting executives in jail is the outcome anyone really wants if a 17 year old uses Tinder.
Jail, would be disproportionate, but, those giants are perfectly aware that kids under certain age have absolutely no idea of the value of money and how much it costs to bring it home, then spend it carefully so there will be some available for less important stuff. So you show them ads of the latest cellphone or pair of famous-rapper-sponsored shoes that cost half of what their parents bring home in a month, and they'll want that crap no matter the cost. This is no that different from targeting very old people with phone calls, among which some can be lured into buying unnecessary stuff, sign fraudulent contracts, or worse, just because a well dressed drone rang their door and spent the evening talking with them to conquer their trust.
Quite frankly I'm disgusted by those manipulative people, and tech giants dwelling in the dark side to maximize their profits make no difference.
>So you show them ads of the latest cellphone or pair of famous-rapper-sponsored shoes that cost half of what their parents bring home in a month, and they'll want that crap no matter the cost. This is no that different from targeting very old people with phone calls, among which some can be lured into buying unnecessary stuff, sign fraudulent contracts, or worse, just because a well dressed drone rang their door and spent the evening talking with them to conquer their trust.
I don't see how companies not properly filtering out minors from their platform equate to them being similar to fraudsters who target the elderly. One is an example of (potentially) willful ignorance of the age of users on their platform, and the other is willful malice targeted at a vulnerable group.
It's also basically no different from the standard for broadcast media advertising. The US has cycled back and forth on whether it should be illegal from decade to decade, but the jury is pretty out on that point of philosophy as a whole.
Jail, would be disproportionate, but, those giants are perfectly aware that kids under certain age have absolutely no idea of the value of money and how much it costs to bring it home, then spend it carefully so there will be some available for less important stuff. So you show them ads of the latest cellphone or pair of famous-rapper-sponsored shoes that cost half of what their parents bring home in a month, and they'll want that crap no matter the cost. This is no that different from targeting very old people with phone calls, among which some can be lured into buying unnecessary stuff, sign fraudulent contracts, or worse, just because a well dressed drone rang their door and spent the evening talking with them to conquer their trust.
Quite frankly I'm disgusted by those manipulative people, and tech giants dwelling in the dark side to maximize their profits make no difference.