Not long ago, a Reuters report raised alarms about how one major tech company set internal rules for its AI chatbots. The guidelines allowed troubling conversations with children and were enforced inconsistently. For families, that story was another reminder that re-lying on tech platforms alone to keep kids safe is not enough.

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For me, this comes down to trust. Parents want to know that when their child logs onto an app, the rules are clear, privacy is respected, and the responsibility for safety doesn’t fall entirely on them. We’ve asked families to shoulder too much of the burden for too long, while platforms make decisions behind the scenes that don’t always align with what’s best for kids.

That’s why Ohio’s current debate over online safety legislation

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