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Social Media Terms and Conditions and Informed Consent From Children: Ethical Analysis.

Christophe Olivier SchnebleMaddalena FavarettoBernice Simonne ElgerDavid Martin Shaw
Published in: JMIR pediatrics and parenting (2021)
This study reveals that social media networks are still lacking in many respects regarding the adequate protection of children. Consent procedures are flawed because they are too complex, and in some cases, children can create social media accounts without sufficient age verification or parental oversight. Adopting measures based on key ethical principles will safeguard the health and well-being of children. This could mean standardizing the registration process in accordance with modern research ethics procedures: give users the key facts that they need in a format that can be read easily and quickly, rather than forcing them to wade through chapters of legal language that they cannot understand. Improving these processes would help safeguard the mental health of children and other social media users.
Keyphrases
  • social media
  • health information
  • mental health
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • machine learning
  • big data
  • artificial intelligence