Wake school board nixes proposal to ban students from making videos of each other without permission
School board members decided against proposed policy changes that would restrict videoing, among other things on Wednesday.
13hon MSN
What happens when you kick millions of teens off social media? Australia’s about to find out
In the next two weeks, social media platforms will start deactivating accounts for children under 16 in Australia under new laws designed to reduce harm online. Other countries are watching, but some ...
12don MSN
'You are enough.' Transgender Iowa student's family speaks out about bullying after suicide
Urbandale High School freshman Miles Phipps death by suicide has pushed his family to speak out about the lasting harm caused ...
3don MSN
Teenagers sue government over nationwide social media ban for ‘violating their right to communicate’
High Court challenge says law imposing ban is ‘grossly excessive’ and infringes on ‘constitutional right of freedom of ...
Briefly on MSN
“This Is How You Change a Community”: Manenberg’s Open-Air Cinema Draws Many Young Kids, SA Moved
A TikTok video of Manenberg children watching a movie projected onto a neighbour's wall showcased a powerful community ...
Find out how to educate students with the skills needed to succeed in a world beset with uncertainty and instability ...
They recognize AI’s challenges and long-term unknowns, but they also believe that with proper guardrails, AI is already ...
FOX 5 Atlanta on MSN
Teen cancer awareness advocate launches in-flight campaign to raise awareness
Soneesh Kothagundla is national director of the American Lung Cancer Initiative, a student-led program to raise awareness ...
Back in 2017, Meta openly listed autoplay on its “roadmap” to keep Instagram users glued to their screens. Snapchat’s ...
High School Musical star Ashley Tisdale has made her name change official after revealing she was going to change her ...
Opinion
The 74 on MSNOpinion
Bernstein: ‘There’s a Window of Opportunity to Create Change’ in AI Chatbots
Seton Hall legal scholar says quick, collective action — lawsuits, public pressure, legislation — can affect how AI bots operate.
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