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Most likely, this trend is irreversible

Posted: Mon Jan 06, 2025 7:25 am
by Reddi2
Other experts are inclined to believe that the state should focus its efforts on educational work with the population, and especially with children and young people, teaching the hygiene of using social networks, teaching how to distinguish truth from fakes, resisting manipulation and fraud on networks, and so on. In our opinion, one should be complemented by the other. Although this is certainly more difficult than simply blocking a social network. 4) According to Ruzanov, the decisive role here is not played by a ban at the state level, but by the work and care of parents in each family.


Up to a certain age, parents should be very attentive to how their children behave on the Internet and social networks, where they go, what they search for, read, watch, how much time they spend in the virtual mexico phone data space. This is a kind of mental hygiene in the family to ensure the full mental, psychological and physiological development of children. 5) A. Ruzanov sadly notes that we are now experiencing a civilizational breakdown, when the active development of social networks and other virtual algorithms carries great risks of destroying the mechanisms of learning and transfer of experience, information, culture, values, and worldview that have been developed over centuries.


Bans will not break this trend, it is global in nature. The arena of the struggle to preserve live communication, a living social space is primarily the family, as well as places where people have a chance of real meetings and live communication - schools, offices, sports grounds, and so on.Yesterday, sociology students (2nd year, Narxoz) came to our office at BRIF Research Group for a tour. Well, how was it a tour? It was more of a conversation about the profession of a researcher, questions and answers.