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Kids die doing new TikTok challenge

Posted by Cambion 
Kids die doing new TikTok challenge
July 08, 2022
It's not Tide Pods this time, folks. Kids are strangling themselves to take part in the "Blackout Challenge." Two young girls have already died doing it and their families are suing TikTok over it.

It amazes me that kids as old as 8 and 9 have to be told to not choke themselves just because someone on the internet does it. Like I was dumb at that age too, but not this dumb. Our future, ladies and gentlemen!

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/06/technology/tiktok-blackout-challenge-deaths.html

Quote

The parents of two girls who said their children died as a result of a “blackout challenge” on TikTok are suing the company, claiming its algorithm intentionally served the children dangerous content that led to their deaths.

The girls were 8 and 9 when they died last year after viewing the challenge, which encouraged users to choke themselves until they passed out, according to the lawsuit, which was filed on Thursday in Superior Court in Los Angeles County.

The suit claims TikTok knew or should have known that its product was “addictive,” that it was directing children to harmful content and that it failed to take significant action to stop those videos or to warn children and parents about them.

The complaint cites in particular TikTok’s “For You” page, which the complaint says shows a stream of videos selected by an algorithm developed by TikTok that is based on a user’s demographic, “likes” and prior activity on the app. The suit seeks unspecified damages.

“TikTok needs to be held accountable for pushing deadly content to these two young girls,” said Matthew P. Bergman, founding lawyer of the Social Media Victims Law Center, a private law firm created in November to hold social media companies accountable for harming children.

A TikTok spokeswoman said the company would not comment on continuing litigation. But the spokeswoman referred to a statement from December, when People magazine reported that a mother from Pennsylvania said her 10-year-old daughter had died while trying the blackout challenge.

“This disturbing ‘challenge,’ which people seem to learn about from sources other than TikTok, long predates our platform and has never been a TikTok trend,” said the statement, which linked to a federal report about deaths from a “choking game” from 1995 to 2007. “We remain vigilant in our commitment to user safety and would immediately remove related content if found. Our deepest sympathies go out to the family for their tragic loss.”

Social media sites like TikTok promote content based on a user’s preferences, said Dr. Lois Lee, a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Council on Injury, Violence and Poison Prevention. Without parental controls, children can be exposed to a range of content, including videos they may not understand, she said.

The academy recommends that parents monitor their children’s social media use and limit screen time as much as possible. When children see many “likes” on a challenge video, Dr. Lee said, they may think it’s safe or fun to try, without understanding the consequences.

“Elementary-school-aged children do not have the knowledge or the insight to realize that these are dangerous things to do,” she said.

One of the girls named in the lawsuit, Lalani Erika Walton, 8, of Temple, Texas, was described in the suit as a sweet and outgoing child who loved dressing up as a princess and playing with makeup. She wanted to be a famous rapper like Cardi B.

She got her first cellphone on her 8th birthday on April 23, 2021, and quickly became “addicted” to TikTok, where she posted videos of herself singing and dancing in hopes of becoming “TikTok famous,” the suit says.

After Lalani was seriously injured in a car accident in which one of her stepbrothers died, she went to live with her stepmother. Without her mother or stepmother knowing, TikTok’s algorithm “directed” Lalani in July 2021 to the blackout challenge, the lawsuit says.

Lalani had bruises on her neck on July 13, 2021, and told her family that she had fallen and bumped herself on her bed frame, the suit says. Soon after, she spent some, if not most, of a 20-hour car trip with her stepmother, sitting in the back seat, watching the blackout challenge, the suit says.

On July 15, 2021, Lalani was found with a rope around her neck, the suit says.

After her death, the police took Lalani’s phone and tablet, and told her stepmother that “Lalani did not commit suicide,” the lawsuit says. A police officer showed the videos of the blackout challenge to the stepmother and said that Lalani had been watching the video on repeat and had been trying the challenge herself, the suit says.

The second girl named in the suit, Arriani Jaileen Arroyo, 9, of Milwaukee, enjoyed playing basketball and kickball and riding her bicycle.

She received a phone when she was 7 and downloaded TikTok, using it to watch and post videos of dancing and singing. She became “addicted” to the product, the suit says, and started trying “challenges.” Because the “challenges” she discussed involved drinking and eating, her parents believed them to be harmless, the suit says.

In January 2021, Arriani told her mother about a girl in Italy who died while trying the blackout challenge, Mr. Bergman said. Arriani’s mother told her that she should never try such a challenge, and Arriani indicated that she understood, the suit says.

On Feb. 26, 2021, Arriani was found with a leash around her neck, the suit says. Mr. Bergman said that Arriani had been watching a blackout challenge on TikTok. She died that day after she was taken off life support, the suit says.

The complaint cites several other children — including a 12-year-old in Oklahoma and a 14-year-old in Australia — who it says died while trying the blackout challenge.

Dangerous challenges, such as one that involved biting or swallowing Tide pods, have circulated on the internet for years. The suit mentions challenges that involved consuming large amounts of Benadryl or getting out of a moving car to dance on the street.

“I don’t know if they’re any more dangerous than they’ve ever been,” said Zach Sweat, the managing editor of Know Your Meme, an internet database that includes memes and online challenges. “I think the accessibility of these types of things and the way these algorithms work broadcasts it to more people.
Re: Kids die doing new TikTok challenge
July 08, 2022
Kids Darwined themselves. News at 10.

+++++++++++++

Passive Aggressive
Master Of Anti-brat
Excuses!
Re: Kids die doing new TikTok challenge
July 09, 2022
Gee, in just a few more years they could have been eating Tide Pods. eye rolling smiley
Re: Kids die doing new TikTok challenge
July 09, 2022
stupidity has its own rewards. my mom, not a paragon specimen of the sub species, just had this to say about doing stupid things one should know would kill oneself ' nothing left but a few tears and a hole in the ground'.

two cents ¢¢

CERTIFIED HOSEHEAD!!!

people (especially women) do not give ONE DAMN about what they inflict on children and I defy anyone to prove me wrong

Dysfunctional relationships almost always have a child. The more dysfunctional, the more children.

The selfish wants of adults outweigh the needs of the child.

Some mistakes cannot be fixed, but some mistakes can be 'fixed'.

People who say they sleep like a baby usually don't have one. Leo J. Burke

Adoption agencies have strict criteria (usually). Breeders, whose combined IQ's would barely hit triple digits, have none.
Re: Kids die doing new TikTok challenge
July 10, 2022
The blame lies on the parents for giving an 8-year-old a phone with full internet capabilities AND giving her unfettered access to anything the hell she wanted and clearly overindulged in.
Re: Kids die doing new TikTok challenge
July 10, 2022
Quote
kidfreetexan
The blame lies on the parents for giving an 8-year-old a phone with full internet capabilities AND giving her unfettered access to anything the hell she wanted and clearly overindulged in.

This describes the majority of parents.

+++++++++++++

Passive Aggressive
Master Of Anti-brat
Excuses!
Re: Kids die doing new TikTok challenge
July 11, 2022
Since the target age for TikTok starts at 16 they are setting themselves up for lots of suing from bad parunts. Hopefully TikTok has an army of lawyers because they're going to need them.

Childrun are a huge pain in the ass...when it comes to any kind of privacy or liability laws.
Re: Kids die doing new TikTok challenge
July 11, 2022
Absolutely. They wash their hands of any responsibility and then whine when things go wrong.
Sorry, this was meant to be a reply to someone who replied to me and somehow I didn't do it right.
Re: Kids die doing new TikTok challenge
July 11, 2022
Quote
freya
Since the target age for TikTok starts at 16 they are setting themselves up for lots of suing from bad parunts. Hopefully TikTok has an army of lawyers because they're going to need them.

Childrun are a huge pain in the ass...when it comes to any kind of privacy or liability laws.

TikTok is a Chinese company, so most American laws don't apply to it. The Chinese also have a higher expectation of common sense, even from children.

+++++++++++++

Passive Aggressive
Master Of Anti-brat
Excuses!
Re: Kids die doing new TikTok challenge
July 18, 2022
Quote
craftyzits
Quote
freya
Since the target age for TikTok starts at 16 they are setting themselves up for lots of suing from bad parunts. Hopefully TikTok has an army of lawyers because they're going to need them.

Childrun are a huge pain in the ass...when it comes to any kind of privacy or liability laws.

TikTok is a Chinese company, so most American laws don't apply to it. The Chinese also have a higher expectation of common sense, even from children.

As they should!
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