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Paulin talked about his experience living in his childhood home for three years to save for a down payment on his own house. My girlfriend and I started saving for a home in 2019 – that's when I decided to continue living at home. In Indian Head, you run for three town council seats and the candidate with the most votes becomes mayor, which was me. Like I would leave school work or documents from town meetings in the living room or on the coffee table. You just have to be prepared to make some sacrifices or not have as much freedom depending on your house rules.
Persons: , Brandon Paulin, Paulin, isn't, He's, Fortnite, Fornite, Taryn, I've, Brandon Paulin We Organizations: Service, Business, Southern New Hampshire University, PlayStation, FedEx Field, Major League Baseball Locations: Indian Head , Maryland, Washington, DC, Southern
Over the last year, state legislators concerned about a mental health crisis among the nation’s young people have passed a raft of children’s online safety measures. Now Louisiana lawmakers have passed an even broader bill that could affect access to large swaths of the internet for minors in the state. The Louisiana measure would prohibit online services — including social networks, multiplayer games and video-sharing apps — from allowing people under 18 to sign up for accounts without parental consent. It would also allow Louisiana parents to cancel the terms-of-service contracts that their children signed for existing accounts on popular services like TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Fornite and Roblox. Laurie Schlegel, the Republican state legislator who spearheaded the new measure, said her bill simply made it clear that the state’s existing contracting rules also covered accounts on online content-sharing platforms.
Persons: Laurie Schlegel Organizations: YouTube, Republican Locations: Utah, California, Louisiana
The maker of the popular online video game "Fortnite" has agreed to pay a record settlement to resolve charges it violated children's privacy, exposed children and teenagers to potential harassment, and duped players of all ages into making unwanted in-game purchases. The Federal Trade Commission announced Monday that North Carolina-based Epic Games will pay a total of $520 million to settle allegations that it collected personal data from children without first obtaining the consent of their parent or guardian. "The video game industry is a place of fast-moving innovation, where player expectations are high and new ideas are paramount. We accepted this agreement because we want Epic to be at the forefront of consumer protection and provide the best experience for our players." According to The Wall Street Journal, Epic was most recently valued at $32 billion.
Epic Games, the developer and publisher of the video game Fornite, will pay $520 million in fines to settle with the FTC over violations of the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). Epic will pay two fines, including a $245 million fine against Fortnite's in-game store and refund systems, and another $275 million fine to address child privacy concerns. Despite the deliberate decision to market to children, the FTC said Epic failed to "cure," or address, COPPA violations. "All the while, kids have been bullied, threatened, and harassed, including sexually, through Fortnite," the FTC complaint read. Only in 2019, "long after Epic obtained empirical evidence pointing to large numbers of Fortnite players" under the age of 13, did Epic introduce an age verification system.
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