Some kids will watch quantum mechanics lectures or knitting tutorials some of the time. But a lot of time is spent watching actual crap on youtube, which is kind of weaponised television
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"Quantum mechanics lectures" are absolute trash if a child isn't particularly interested in them. Virtually anything they would choose themselves would be a better use of their time.
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Replying to @webdevMason @AustenLamacraft and
In my life I've learned about 8,000 times more by exploring my whimsical interests of the moment than through any forced lecture or involuntary project.
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Replying to @jcrichman @webdevMason and
I'm certainly not talking about anything involuntary. Agency is the holy grail, isn't it? But I'd rather have no youtube than no agency.
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Replying to @AustenLamacraft @webdevMason and
Unsupervised Youtube does seem dangerous for kids. Youtube's algorithms lean heavily toward exploitative clown shit that seems guaranteed to make kids incredibly stupid. Within an hour of following suggested vids from quantum mechanics, a kid will end up at Logan Paul.
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Replying to @jcrichman @AustenLamacraft and
I'm assuming you actually believe the sentiment behind this — Why? Where did you first hear it, or from whom? What's your experience with Youtube search/recommendations, and how would you change it?
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Replying to @webdevMason @AustenLamacraft and
I've seen the stuff my niece and nephew gravitate to on Youtube. It's worse than an "ow my balls" parody. I had to sit down with my nephew and show him a slower longer video and the cool stuff in it; he got totally engrossed, but nobody had done that before.
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Replying to @jcrichman @webdevMason and
Kids aren't designed by default to process complexity without a little help, while Youtube's algorithms are designed to allow professionals to exploit them at 80 second intervals with almost no interaction. It's the kind of thing Ray Bradbury would start a riot if he saw.
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Replying to @jcrichman @webdevMason and
It's not that it's juvenile per se, it's that it's edited so hyperactively and just, across the board, expressly designed to make them think they're feeling good about it, without actually enriching them on any level whatsoever.
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Replying to @jcrichman @webdevMason and
It reminds me of this except targeted at highly impressionable 7 year olds by sociopathic 30 year olds:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YJg02ivYzSs …
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Next time you have the opportunity, I hope you ask your niece and nephew what they like to watch and rather than redirect them really dig into why they like it. What they find funny, what this stuff reminds them of. You might be surprised.
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