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Social Media, Informed Consent, and the Harm Principle
www.mdpi.comThis article examines whether social media users can validly consent to their own use of social media. It argues that, whether or not social media use is analogous to public health interventions, there is an obligation to provide users with information about risks and benefits, and absent that provision, there is no valid consent. Many or most users, in any event, do not have the capacity to consent, according to the criteria for capacity articulated in the ‘four abilities’ model: the ability to express a choice, the ability to understand the facts pertinent to the decision in question, the ability of a subject to believe that the information applies to them, and the ability to reason—in the sense of being able to consider and weigh (with reference to the patient’s own concerns, circumstances, and values) the main possible outcomes of the decision to opt for the intervention and the decision to opt not to undergo it. Even if an individual social media user is capacitous according to these criteria, many will fail to be judged capacitous if (as it is argued should be the case), a further criterion, identified by Jennifer Hawkins must be satisfied, namely that the individual can look after their own interests at least as well as most other people can. It follows from this consideration that not only can regulation of social media (in the form of a ban) be justified under Mill’s harm principle, but that non-regulation cannot be justified.
Jesus.
screen may take the place of paper. Nobody panics because people spend 60% of time on some form of paper media activity.
screen may take the place of an instrument. You can make music with that “electronic item”.
Content matters. What you do with that screen is more important than how much time you spend with an “electronic item”.
We made the outdoors a pay to play hellscape. Where do you want them to interact socially? This isn’t directed at you despite what it says. It’s directed at the part of the article you quoted.
Edit: I also wanted to add that social media just highlights and streamlines the problems with the way people socially interact and affect each other and it does so using algorithms to re-enforce dependency. I’m certainly not saying social media isn’t addictive or harmful. But that these problems are exacerbated by social media and actually exist even in a world without it, just with a much shorter reach.