Page 182 - யார்க் வழக்கறிஞர் ஜநரல் லீடிஶிய ஜேம்ஸ் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Dozens of state attorneys general press Facebook to abandon its plans for kids version of Instagram
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Forty-three state attorneys generals do not want Instagram for Kids to happen.
In a letter, they say Facebook does not have a good history of protecting children.
Facebook is building a version of Instagram aimed at children under 13.
Over 40 state attorneys general have signed a letter to Facebook s CEO Mark Zuckerberg urging him to abandon plans to launch Instagram for kids under the age of 13. In March, Buzzfeed News reported that the company was planning to build a version of the popular photo-sharing service that would cater to children with the safest possible experience.
The coalition of attorneys general says that the proposed platform will be detrimental to children for myriad reasons and that Facebook has historically failed to protect the welfare of children on its platform.
As Cuomo Fights for Survival, He Revives His Combative Image
The governor has begun to publicly undermine the state attorney general, Letitia James, who is overseeing investigations into Mr. Cuomo’s conduct.
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo announces the start of the statewide “Vaccinate NY” ad campaign during an event at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York last month.Credit.Pool photo by Timothy A. Clary
Published May 10, 2021Updated May 19, 2021
ALBANY, N.Y. Over the past few weeks, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has crisscrossed New York, promoting the state’s vaccine rollout and economic reopening, heralding the end of pandemic-era curfews and capacity limits.
(AP Photo/Mike Stewart File)
A new analysis by a pair of gun control advocates doesn’t offer much hope for fans of gun bans, though sociologists Eulalie Laschever and David S. Meyer do their best to put a positive spin on their research in a piece published at the
Washington Post. The pair say they’ve “tracked gun politics in the United States from 1945 to 2015,” and based on their research they say they “do not expect Congress to pass new national legislation” anytime soon.
Despite that, the headline of the
WaPo piece screams that “now might be different.” Why? The academics claim that the NRA’s legal woes could spell the death of the Second Amendment movement.
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