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"Probably"
This is your definition of scientific?
Thanks for proving my point.
great account to follow regarding the science on the subject: https://ohai.social/@Garwboy/113554246823274751
Let's remember the ban in Australia concerns platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Reddit and X. Exemptions will apply to services such as YouTube, messenger kids, whatsapp, kids helpline and google classroom.
The account you provided starts by stating that "the most rigorous analysis" found little/no significant evidence , but fails to link to them. He immediately lumps together smartphone and social media, then goes on justifying the importance of both with arguments that clearly concern almost exclusively smartphones.
This ban is about social media, not smartphones altogether.
Garwboy's arguments:
they let kids stay connected with friends, foster a community, allow coordination of activities: he's talking about smartphones.
they allow access to school work, references, important resources: again, smartphones/the internet
they allow access to support, help and guidance from experienced and informed individuals and groups: this point I'll give to him; as for years, Reddit has served that very purpose for me. Who knows what that site has become though.
he compares them to roads (roads kill children every year, but they save many lives, make the world go round,...): again this whole comparison is only valid for smartphones.
they are a refuge for children who experience abuse at home: this is probably true, but it is not an argument about how social media helps in these situations. I could say the same about drugs .
Which brings us to my point of view: social media are, for many, a drug. A bit of it can be good, fun and even sometimes make your like better, but we have to acknowledge the negative side, which in my opinion can have devastating effects in a person's mental, especially when the mental is still in its forming stage.
I don't do opinions. Burnett (a neuroscientist) has linked many sources - maybe you just need to read a bit more.
Additionally, your claims about what's "smartphones" and what's "social media" are strange - my kids use Snapchat to communicate. Do you think they use SMS?? How old are your kids?
Look it's my opinion from personal experience, just disregard it if it bothers you.
I read the whole series of posts but didn't see them, I guess I needed to search some more - my bad.
I'm not saying social media doesn't let you do all those things, I'm saying you don't need it to do them.
I don't have kids and never used Snapchat, but what does Snapchat provide that helps them communicate better than let's say WhatsApp?
Edit: I went to dig on Burnett's page for the links you tell me about. All I found was a radio interview of a doctor on radio Boston, an article from the Sunday times about Burnett's book and an article on Wales online, also about the book.
Could you link me to the relevant articles I must have missed?
Edit 2: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7364393/ Found this article that combines different studies made on the subject. Around halfway through the page you will find the results of some of these studies and you will see the answer isn't clear.
Yeah I think you should abstain from having opinions on what their generation is doing then. In the whole of human history no older generation has ever been correct regarding what the upcoming generation should or shouldn't do.
The study you link says the exact same thing as Burnett does. It doesn't support "social media is bad for kids".
edit:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352250X21001500
I may not be a scientist but I know enough about history that any statement that says "in the whole of human history..." and doesn't finish with death or taxes is bullshit.
Was the older generation wrong when they told there kids not to do crack when it started becoming popular in the 80s? granted I'm pretty against the war on drugs but even if we do fully legalize we should still keep it away from kids because:
Both of those are true , albeit to a far lesser extent, for social media.
Yeah the level of scientific illiteracy in favor of self-righteous yammering was actually surprising for me to find on Lemmy. Who all upvoted that "probably" comment? smh.