[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"series-regulating-ai-social-media-real-world-safety":3,"site-settings":212},{"_id":4,"_type":5,"kindLabel":6,"title":7,"slug":8,"path":9,"excerpt":10,"status":11,"featured":12,"publishedAt":13,"featuredImageUrl":13,"featuredImageAlt":14,"pieceCount":15,"pieces":16,"intro":72,"seo":208},"43ee44c6-4b34-4403-94ad-c3b5fdeb8432","series","Series","Regulating AI & Social Media for Real-World Safety","regulating-ai-social-media-real-world-safety","\u002Fperspective\u002Fseries\u002Fregulating-ai-social-media-real-world-safety","A practical look at what it would actually take to regulate AI and social platforms for kids’ real-world safety—drawing on lessons from other industries and naming the tradeoffs.","active",true,null,"Conceptual image of AI and social media symbols surrounded by caution markers, suggesting regulation and child safety.",7,[17,26,33,40,49,57,65],{"key":18,"type":19,"kindLabel":20,"label":21,"title":22,"path":23,"excerpt":24,"publishedAt":13,"featuredImageUrl":13,"featuredImageAlt":25},"369592fb78a2","perspective","Perspective","Part 1","Why Self-Regulation Fails (And Always Has)","\u002Fperspective\u002Fwhy-self-regulation-fails","Companies don't change because they want to — they change when the cost of not changing outweighs the cost of changing. The case against hoping tech fixes itself.","Conceptual image representing technology self-regulation, with corporate skyscrapers overshadowing small regulatory road signs.",{"key":27,"type":19,"kindLabel":20,"label":28,"title":29,"path":30,"excerpt":31,"publishedAt":13,"featuredImageUrl":13,"featuredImageAlt":32},"06a047ff76d5","Part 2","What GDPR & Canadian Anti-Spam Laws Actually Teach Us","\u002Fperspective\u002Fwhat-gdpr-and-casl-teach-us","The 'regulation won't work because the internet is global' argument sounds convincing until you look at what GDPR and CASL actually did.","Stylized map highlighting Europe and Canada connected by data lines, representing the global impact of GDPR and Canadian anti-spam laws.",{"key":34,"type":19,"kindLabel":20,"label":35,"title":36,"path":37,"excerpt":38,"publishedAt":13,"featuredImageUrl":13,"featuredImageAlt":39},"e3389b135226","Part 3","The Only Thing That Works: Hitting the Bottom Line","\u002Fperspective\u002Fthe-only-thing-that-works-hitting-the-bottom-line","If you want companies like Meta or OpenAI to change their behavior around kids, the conversation has to reach revenue. Everything else is negotiable.","Conceptual image of a tech company headquarters overlaid with a red downward revenue arrow.",{"key":41,"type":42,"kindLabel":43,"label":44,"title":45,"path":46,"excerpt":47,"publishedAt":13,"featuredImageUrl":13,"featuredImageAlt":48},"538b6afba961","parentGuide","Parent Guide","Part 4","Age-Gating That Actually Works (Not Just a Checkbox)","\u002Fguides\u002Fage-gating-that-actually-works","Typing in a fake birthday isn't age verification — it's just a question. Here’s what real, working age-gating would need to look like, and what parents can do right now.","Illustration of a sign-up screen with an age checkbox, overlaid with icons for ID cards, credit cards, and device settings.",{"key":50,"type":19,"kindLabel":20,"label":51,"title":52,"path":53,"excerpt":54,"publishedAt":55,"featuredImageUrl":13,"featuredImageAlt":56},"483d15c14a8b","Part 5","Should Free Access Exist for Kids?","\u002Fperspective\u002Fshould-free-access-exist-for-kids","Free access removes every barrier — including the ones that are supposed to keep younger users out. That's not accidental. It's part of how these platforms grow.","2026-05-07T17:59:00.000Z","Conceptual image of layered digital gates in front of a social platform interface, representing conditional free access for kids.",{"key":58,"type":19,"kindLabel":20,"label":59,"title":60,"path":61,"excerpt":62,"publishedAt":63,"featuredImageUrl":13,"featuredImageAlt":64},"267591a6959f","Part 6","AI and Privacy vs Safety — Where Should the Line Be?","\u002Fperspective\u002Fprivacy-vs-safety-where-should-the-line-be","Privacy isn't absolute in any other context. The question isn't whether to protect it — it's where the threshold should be when behavior starts signaling real risk.","2026-05-07T22:07:00.000Z","Scales balancing a padlock on one side and a safety shield on the other, representing the tradeoff between privacy and safety in digital platforms.",{"key":66,"type":19,"kindLabel":20,"label":67,"title":68,"path":69,"excerpt":70,"publishedAt":55,"featuredImageUrl":13,"featuredImageAlt":71},"6589bdb8eb91","Part 7","The Mental Impact No One Is Regulating Yet","\u002Fperspective\u002Fthe-mental-impact-no-one-is-regulating-yet","The most measurable harms get regulated first. But the slow accumulation of distorted thinking, constant comparison, and shallow engagement is harder to name — and probably matters more.","Abstract illustration of overlapping social media windows and AI chat bubbles surrounding a human head silhouette, representing mental overload and distorted thinking.",[73,97,105,113,130,140,148,156,164,172,180,188,196,204],{"_key":74,"_type":75,"children":76,"markDefs":95,"style":96},"d6c5c102ba08","block",[77,82,87,91],{"_key":78,"_type":79,"marks":80,"text":81},"8c838716b9dd","span",[],"Something shifted in how I started thinking about AI and social media — not in an alarmed way, but in a more practical one. Less ",{"_key":83,"_type":79,"marks":84,"text":86},"3edc696abb92",[85],"em","“this is terrifying”",{"_key":88,"_type":79,"marks":89,"text":90},"77ecea4bcc42",[]," and more ",{"_key":92,"_type":79,"marks":93,"text":94},"3c6ec6adc69b",[85],"“okay, so how does this actually work, and who’s supposed to be responsible for it?”",[],"normal",{"_key":98,"_type":75,"children":99,"markDefs":104,"style":96},"f0db62827863",[100],{"_key":101,"_type":79,"marks":102,"text":103},"f025befa9612",[],"Because that’s the part that doesn’t get talked about enough. When something goes wrong — a platform exposes kids to harmful content, or an AI tool shapes what they believe about the world — the conversation usually lands back on parents. Be more aware. Set better limits. Have more conversations.",[],{"_key":106,"_type":75,"children":107,"markDefs":112,"style":96},"7b637c16d25c",[108],{"_key":109,"_type":79,"marks":110,"text":111},"2f499602eb91",[],"And I’m not saying that’s wrong, exactly. But it puts a lot of weight on individuals to manage systems that are designed by entire teams of engineers and optimized constantly to hold attention.",[],{"_key":114,"_type":75,"children":115,"markDefs":129,"style":96},"9a6c94ab2932",[116,120,125],{"_key":117,"_type":79,"marks":118,"text":119},"31b290d08699",[],"This series is me working through the ",{"_key":121,"_type":79,"marks":122,"text":124},"f77c1ad448ad",[123],"strong","regulation",{"_key":126,"_type":79,"marks":127,"text":128},"6a3d075b98a4",[]," side of that:",[],{"_key":131,"_type":75,"children":132,"level":137,"listItem":138,"markDefs":139,"style":96},"7e2ba9de3e86",[133],{"_key":134,"_type":79,"marks":135,"text":136},"b37ed1b04927",[],"What it would actually take for companies to change their behavior in ways that matter",1,"bullet",[],{"_key":141,"_type":75,"children":142,"level":137,"listItem":138,"markDefs":147,"style":96},"f61c67b93a98",[143],{"_key":144,"_type":79,"marks":145,"text":146},"86ccd5ce02ea",[],"What’s already happened in other industries that gives us a useful template",[],{"_key":149,"_type":75,"children":150,"level":137,"listItem":138,"markDefs":155,"style":96},"30ef27450ac2",[151],{"_key":152,"_type":79,"marks":153,"text":154},"11fbf615953e",[],"Where things get genuinely complicated — around privacy, free access, business models, and the kinds of harm that don’t show up in a single moment",[],{"_key":157,"_type":75,"children":158,"markDefs":163,"style":96},"87d2927a827a",[159],{"_key":160,"_type":79,"marks":161,"text":162},"f3747a44aec7",[],"I don’t have a clean answer. I don’t think anyone does right now. But I think the conversation is worth having more specifically than it usually gets.",[],{"_key":165,"_type":75,"children":166,"markDefs":171,"style":96},"65b91da88b88",[167],{"_key":168,"_type":79,"marks":169,"text":170},"96a410dad776",[],"Across this series, I’ll be looking at questions like:",[],{"_key":173,"_type":75,"children":174,"level":137,"listItem":138,"markDefs":179,"style":96},"30e0dd85417e",[175],{"_key":176,"_type":79,"marks":177,"text":178},"c13909c1cf5a",[],"What kinds of safety standards could we realistically require from AI and social platforms that serve kids?",[],{"_key":181,"_type":75,"children":182,"level":137,"listItem":138,"markDefs":187,"style":96},"719486d8d037",[183],{"_key":184,"_type":79,"marks":185,"text":186},"a157b40cf53a",[],"How have we handled similar problems with food, toys, cars, or TV — and what actually worked there?",[],{"_key":189,"_type":75,"children":190,"level":137,"listItem":138,"markDefs":195,"style":96},"c243b7c17d39",[191],{"_key":192,"_type":79,"marks":193,"text":194},"ccac40a1a36b",[],"Where should responsibility sit between parents, companies, and governments when the risks are subtle, long-term, or hard to measure?",[],{"_key":197,"_type":75,"children":198,"markDefs":203,"style":96},"ebe6b887319f",[199],{"_key":200,"_type":79,"marks":201,"text":202},"bb917d8050ca",[],"The goal isn’t to land on a perfect policy blueprint. It’s to get clearer on what “real-world safety” would even mean in this context — and what it would look like for companies to be held to it in ways that stick.",[],{"_key":205,"_type":206,"alt":207,"children":13,"imageUrl":13,"markDefs":13},"5085f70c5b64","image","Abstract illustration of a child standing between oversized icons of a smartphone and an AI interface, connected by regulatory scales symbolizing balance between technology and safety.",{"canonicalUrl":13,"metaDescription":209,"metaTitle":7,"metaTitlePrefix":13,"noIndex":210,"ogDescription":211,"ogImageUrl":13,"ogTitle":7},"A practical series on what it would actually take to regulate AI and social media for kids’ real-world safety, drawing on lessons from other industries and naming the tradeoffs.",false,"Unpacking how AI and social media could be regulated to protect kids in ways that actually stick—beyond vague panic and generic advice to parents.",{"siteTitle":213,"siteTagline":214,"siteDescription":215,"organizationName":213,"personName":216,"defaultOgImageUrl":217,"socialHandles":218,"navLinks":219,"footerText":234,"cursorMode":12,"interactionMode":235,"missionPrompt":236},"Mom Player Character","For parents in the digital deep end","Recon, parent guides, and perspective on the digital world your kid already lives in.","Shannon","\u002Fog-default.svg",{},[220,223,226,228,231],{"label":221,"href":222},"Recon","\u002Frecon",{"label":224,"href":225},"Guides","\u002Fguides",{"label":20,"href":227},"\u002Fperspective",{"label":229,"href":230},"Live","\u002Flive",{"label":232,"href":233},"About","\u002Fabout","Actively investigating the internet your kid already lives in","tasteful","Pick the parent problem, get the clearest next move."]