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The UK s Age-Appropriate Design Code Comes into Force in September 2021 | Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP
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Facial analysis technology could create a child-safe Internet
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Can facial analysis technology create a child-safe internet? Alex Hern © Provided by The Guardian Photograph: da-kuk/Getty Images
Suppose you pulled out your phone this morning to post a pic to your favourite social network – let’s call it Twinstabooktok – and were asked for a selfie before you could log on. The picture you submitted wouldn’t be sent anywhere, the service assured you: instead, it would use state-of-the-art machine-learning techniques to work out your age. In all likelihood, once you’ve submitted the scan, you can continue on your merry way. If the service guessed wrong, you could appeal, though that might take a bit longer.
Digital regulation: overview of government activity
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James P. Steyer
Virginia is poised to become the second state in the nation to pass a broad consumer privacy bill. Virginiaâs Consumer Data Protection Act has passed through the General Assembly and the governor is expected to sign it any day. The billâs patron insists the law will give individuals control over their digital data, restoring trust in technologies and data-driven companies that have been irresponsible with peopleâs privacy.
Itâs a noble aim, but efforts to regulate how companies collect and use data is notoriously complicated. Common Sense was on the frontlines in California, working to pass its landmark privacy law in 2018 and a ballot initiative last November that strengthened that law. We have seen firsthand how tech companies fight tooth and nail to defeat anything that would change their business practices and then find ways to sneak around and slip away from following the law once anything is passed.