Let’s build a children’s public internet

Would a Big Tech tax for kid-focused nonprofit platforms be complicated? Sure. Where we’re headed is worse.

Would a Big Tech tax for kid-focused nonprofit platforms be complicated? Sure. Where we’re headed is worse.

An increasing number of people seem to agree the internet is terrible for children — allegedly addictive, destructive to self-esteem, possibly a portal to predators. Over the past year, several countries have started requiring stringent age verification or outright bans for minors. At the end of June in the US, the House of Representatives passed the Kids Internet and Digital Safety (KIDS) Act, the latest in a string of attempted online child safety regulations. A couple of days later, a Pew Research Center survey found over half of US respondents favored a ban on social media for anyone under 16. There’s a growing sense that the digital world is a public health crisis and something — no matter how extreme — must be done.
But while politicians chase elaborate and questionable methods of keeping kids away from the worst of the internet, another option is staring them in the face: Spend money to make it better. And, fortunately, I’ve got an idea: Levy a tax on major tech companies, and hand out that money for the construction of what we should call a children’s public internet.
First of all, what is a children’s public internet? I’m not suggesting an entirely separate service like France’s national proto-internet Minitel , but something more like the “public lane in the information superhighway” that author Ben Tarnoff proposed in Internet for the People — or, more tangibly, the 20th-century push for children’s public television. The goal would be to fund new or existing online services that meet two criteria: They primarily serve children, and they don’t operate for profit. Beyond that, the options are myriad. A few hypothetical grant recipients:
These services could be new or existing, led by institutions or individuals, developed and maintained by minors or adults, and accessible by small groups or anybody on the internet. The primary goal would be something almost everyone agrees is beneficial: cutting the profit motive out of kids’ and teenagers’ online lives.
Nearly every popular criticism of social media is, in some way, about its perverse economic incentives. Critics warn of allegedly predatory “dark patterns” that allow companies to hook users and scale endlessly, or invasive advertising based on even more invasive data collection, or moderation teams operated at the lowest feasible cost. However accurate any individual complaint is, years of leaks and court filings demonstrate that companies are constantly balancing user well-being with the need for engagement and profit — a stressor that’s only increasing as they divert resources toward AI.
Verified source · The Verge
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