Legislators keep spinning their wheels on kids' online safety—nothing seems to budge. Bill after bill gets stuck in the pipeline, and meanwhile the digital landscape keeps shifting faster than anyone can regulate it. The frustration is real: policymakers want action, but the gears of government grind slow. Everyone agrees kids need protection online, yet the legislative process remains stuck in neutral. It's a classic case of good intentions meeting bureaucratic bottlenecks.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
7 Likes
Reward
7
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
blocksnark
· 12h ago
It's all just politicians' nonsense. Do they really think passing a bill can protect children? Laughable. Technology has long outpaced them by a mile.
View OriginalReply0
BTCRetirementFund
· 12h ago
Laughing out loud, it's the same old story again—regulation always lags behind the pace of technological development.
View OriginalReply0
shadowy_supercoder
· 12h ago
Basically, it's just talking about protection, but in reality, they're still sitting on the side of the利益集团.
View OriginalReply0
MEVSandwichMaker
· 12h ago
Those politicians keep saying they want to protect children, but then they just drag their feet. It cracks me up.
---
Regulation can never keep up with the pace of technological innovation. It's a fate, I guess.
---
By the time the bill passes, it will be ages from now, and children will have already been exploited.
---
Where's the promised protection? Is this it? The government’s efficiency is truly remarkable.
---
On the blockchain side, technology is exploding, but they’re still discussing the details...
---
A bunch of empty talk. When it’s time to take action, they start bickering.
View OriginalReply0
BrokenYield
· 12h ago
lol classic systemic risk nobody wants to price in—government's leverage ratio on regulation is basically negative at this point. they'll keep spinning wheels while the protocol vulnerabilities stack up, and by the time they pass something it'll already be obsolete. that's the black swan event nobody's hedging for tbh
Legislators keep spinning their wheels on kids' online safety—nothing seems to budge. Bill after bill gets stuck in the pipeline, and meanwhile the digital landscape keeps shifting faster than anyone can regulate it. The frustration is real: policymakers want action, but the gears of government grind slow. Everyone agrees kids need protection online, yet the legislative process remains stuck in neutral. It's a classic case of good intentions meeting bureaucratic bottlenecks.