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The Tech Download: Teen social media bans miss a key part of the puzzle: AI chatbots

This report is taken from this week’s newsletter The Tech Download. As you see? You can subscribe Here.

A new addiction is quietly spreading among young people.

They are no longer just doom-mongering on social media. They are increasingly locked into conversations with AI chatbots that seem endlessly knowledgeable, supportive, and constantly validating. And they are trying to break it.

Nearly half of teens in the U.S. now use chatbots like ChatGPT, Copilot, and Character.AI for schoolwork, learning, or just for fun. Pew Research Center.

Meanwhile, a growing body of evidence shows that young people are using chatbots as an alternative. real life friendships and relationships and they show addiction-related patterns.

Does this sound like a painfully familiar story? Because it is. Let’s zoom out for a second.

When Australia became the first country to legally impose a social media ban on teenagers in December, it became a test run for the rest of the world. This led to governments from the UK to Spain, France, Greece and Canada following suit in the following months. Meanwhile, state-level bans are gaining traction in the US

However, as a generation that grew up in the pain of social media, I am afraid that we are 15 years too late. As this shiny new technology comes into play in the form of artificial intelligence and chatbots, experts I spoke to call it deja vu.

“It’s right that we use social media as a case study for something we don’t want to repeat. So it’s like, fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on you,” Kaitlyn Regehr, Associate Professor of Digital Humanities at University College London, told CNBC.

Regehr said governments have spent years catching up on social media regulations but are repeating the same mistake by allowing untested AI products to reach children.

Are the regulations inadequate?

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