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Tag: Cellphone

  • ‘We need to protect our children’: Georgia Senate study on impact of social media and AI on kids is approved

    Georgia State Senator Shawn Still (R-48) serves as the co-chair of the study committee examining the impact of social media and AI on children. Looking ahead a bit, Still said of the report, “This is going to be a bipartisan bill.” Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The 2026 Georgia Legislative session is still a month away, but there are still discussions to be had on the Senate floor. 

    On Wednesday, December 10, a study committee led by Senate Co-Chairs Sally Harrell (D-District 40) and Shawn Still (R-District 48), alongside committee members Marty Harbin (R-16), Sheikh Rahman (D-5), and Ed Setzler (R-37), explored the impact of social media and AI on children. During the public meeting, which was held in room 450 of the State Capitol, platform privacy protections were also discussed. 

    “We are very optimistic that we are going to have some legislation to protect our kids in this state,” said Still. 

    According to data in the report, the average time a child spends on their cellphones, whether on social media or communicating, is five hours. The committee is made up of parents and grandparents. 

    “Our kids instead are online constantly in a defensive state,” Harrell. “This comes at a great cost for our kids.” 

    The report brought forth by the committee featured five topics that made up the most important chapters. Those topics included education, parental controls, social media and gaming, privacy and design, and digital ownership. 

    One component of the report will address extending the bell-to-bell cellphone restrictions that were put in place last year to include high school students.

    The report was unanimously approved by the committee during the half-hour meeting. 

    “This is going to be a bipartisan bill,” Still said.

    “We need to protect our children, and hopefully this becomes a bipartisan bill,” said Sheikh Rahman (D-5) (right). Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    Following the unanimous approval of the report, which now has to make its way down the pathway that is the Georgia Legislature, Still said there has already been internal and external pushback about the report, and to expect more. 

    “This will be one of the last times we are together and unscathed,” he said. “The technology companies don’t want this.” 

    Rahman added, “We need to protect our children, and hopefully this becomes a bipartisan bill.” After the meeting, Rahman told The Atlanta Voice about social media, “Our children know a lot more than we will ever know. Things change so fast.” 

    The first Muslim lawmaker in Georgia, Rahman, said that in private, the tech companies and their representatives have expressed equal amounts of concern for young people on social media and utilizing artificial intelligence. Still, in private, they don’t want bills like the one the committee will push forward to succeed.

    “The stock prices are their concern,” he said. “It’s about greed for them. We are looking to protect our children. We are going to need support from the people.”

    “He’s a smart kid, but I worry that the time spent crowds out the other things he likes to do,” Janice Mathis (above), an employee at Clark Atlanta University and a lawyer, said about her 13-year-old grandson. Mathis attended the meeting as a concerned citizen. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice 

    Janice Mathis was sitting in the gallery, taking notes and nodding along with the senators as they spoke about why the report, and ultimately a bill, was critical. A grandmother of a 13-year-old boy, Mathis, knows how much time her grandson spends on his phone and online. She, too, is concerned.

    He’s a smart kid, but I worry that the time spent crowds out the other things he likes to do,” Mathis, an employee at Clark Atlanta University and a lawyer, said. 

    In many cases, the amount of social media dependence has nothing to do with the quality of parenting, said Setzler. 

    “This report is a responsibility scheme, not a regulatory scheme,” he said. “It’s not either or, it’s both and.” 

    In 2026, an election year in which key Georgia seats, including the governor’s, are up for grabs, there will be many topics on the table this coming legislative session. Despite the Capitol being split by two Republican chambers, there might not be as much agreement as that would lead people to believe. 

    This is also the final legislative session for current Republican Georgia Governor Brian Kemp. It may also be the final session for current State Senators Ruwa Romman (D-97) and Derrick Jackson (D-68), who are running for Governor. Former State Senators Jason Esteves (D-35) and John F. Kennedy (R-18) are no longer holding their respective seats as they focus on campaigns for governor and lieutenant governor, respectively. 

    “We are at a critical point when we can either turn this around or it’s going to get worse,” Harrell said. 

    Donnell Suggs

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  • Durham school leaders consider revisions to cellphone policy

    Durham Public Schools is the latest district in the area to weigh revisions to its cellphone policy to align with a new state law.  

    School leaders Thursday will review changes that would require middle and high school students to power off their
    phones instead of just silencing them. The new policy also has two options to either
    prohibit smart glasses altogether, or they only be used as prescription glasses
    with technology turned off.

    Wake County Public Schools is also considering making changes to align with the law. The current policy says cellphones can be kept in silent mode.

    Wake school leaders are also considering amending the policy to ensure students can still bring personal laptops to school, so long as they’re used for instructional purposes. That has been a point of confusion, with some believing the policy did not allow personal laptops at all.

    The Wake school board plans to approve the changes by the end of the year.

    Earlier this year, the school board approved a standalone cellphone policy that drastically restricted their use, after years of schools establishing their own rules and enforcing them differently.

    WRAL News reported earlier this year that different approaches to enforcement yielded different successes.

    This summer, state lawmakers passed House Bill 959, which requires school boards across the state to approve policies restricting the use of cellphones and other communication devices and to establish consequences for people who violate those policies.

    The push came as states and schools across the country were responding to concerns about device addiction among young people and concerns that devices were disrupting learning.

    Some research has suggested that some policies can effectively curb device use. One recent study found modest academic gains two years after schools implemented a strict policy, but saw more  students suspended when policies were strictest.

     

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  • Franklin man gets up to 13 years for using cellphone to secretly photograph girl

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    Aug. 26—A Franklin man convicted of more than two dozen felony charges for using a cellphone to secretly photograph an underage girl is facing more than a dozen years in prison.

    Michael Joe Boston, 49, was sentenced last week by Warren County Common Pleas Judge Donald Oda II to nine to 13 years in prison after he pleaded guilty to 12 counts of illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material or performance; 12 counts of voyeurism; and four misdemeanor counts of sexual imposition, according to his sentencing document.

    Boston reportedly placed a cellphone under a door to take photographs of a girl in a state of nudity between Jan. 1 and Aug. 7, 2024, according to the Warren County Prosecutor’s Office.

    He also is accused of engaging in sexual conduct with the girl on four separate occasions.

    The Franklin Division of Police investigated the allegations after the girl, who was known to the defendant, told a parent who reported it to law enforcement.

    Boston was indicted for 24 additional counts of illegal use of a minor in nudity-oriented material or performance plus a count of possession of criminal tools, all felony charges, which were dismissed as part of his plea.

    In addition to his prison term, Boston was designated a Tier II sexual offender, which will require him to register his address every 180 days for 25 years. He also must serve a mandatory five years of parole following his release, according to court records.

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  • Lyle Menendez denied parole, will remain in prison along with younger brother Erik

    A day after his younger brother was denied release, Lyle Menendez also saw California parole officials reject his bid for freedom, ruling he will remain behind bars for now for the 1989 shotgun murders of his parents.

    The parole board grilled Menendez, 57, over his efforts to get witnesses to lie during his trials, the lavish shopping sprees he and his brother Erik, 54, took after their parents’ killings, and whether he felt relief after the murders.

    “I felt this shameful period of those six months of having to lie to relatives who were grieving,” Menendez told the board. “I felt the need to suffer. That it was no relief.”

    As the elder brother, Menendez said he at times felt like the protector of Erik, but that he soon realized the murders were not the right way out of sexual abuse they were allegedly suffering at the hands of their parents.

    “I sort of started to feel like I had not rescued my brother,” he said. “I destroyed his life. I’d rescued nobody.”

    The closely watched hearing for Lyle Menendez, one of the most well-known inmates currently in the state’s prison system, was thrown into disarray Friday afternoon after audio of his brother’s parole hearing on Thursday was publicly released.

    The audio, published by ABC 7, sparked anger and frustration from the brothers’ relatives and their attorney, who accused the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation of leaking the audio and tainting Lyle’s hearing.

    A CDCR spokesperson confirmed the audio was “erroneously” issued in response to a records request, but did not elaborate or immediately respond to additional questions from The Times.

    “I have protected myself, I have stayed out of this, I have not had a relationship with two human beings because I was afraid, and I came here today and I came here yesterday and I trusted that this would only be released in a transcript,” said Tiffani Lucero-Pastor, a relative of the brothers. “You’ve misled the family.”

    Heidi Rummel, Lyle Menendez’s parole attorney, also criticized CDCR, accusing the agency of turning the hearing into a “spectacle.”

    “I don’t think you can possibly understand the emotion of what this family is experiencing,” she said. “They have spent so much time trying to protect their privacy and dignity.”

    After the audio was published, Rummel said family members who planned to testify decided not to speak after all, and said she would be looking to seal the transcripts of Friday’s hearing.

    Parole Commissioner Julie Garland said regulations allowed for audio to be released under the California Public Records Act. Transcripts of parole hearings typically become public within 30 days of a grant or denial, under state law.

    During his first-ever appeal to the state parole board, Lyle Menendez was questioned over his credibility.

    Garland referred to Menendez’s appeal to get witnesses to lie, plans to escape, and lies to relatives about the killings as a “sophistication of the web of lies and manipulation you demonstrated.”

    Menendez said he had no plan at the time, there was just “a lot of flailing in what was happening.”

    “Even though you fooled your entire family about you being a murderer, and you recruited all these people to help you … you don’t think that’s being a good liar?” Garland asked.

    Menendez said the remorse he felt after the crimes perhaps helped create a “strong belief” he didn’t have anything to do with the killings.

    Dmitry Gorin, a former Los Angeles County prosecutor, said the board’s decision denying parole was consistent with past decisions involving violent crimes.

    “Although this is a high-profile case, the parole board rejecting the release demonstrates that it seeks to keep violent offenders locked up because they still pose a risk to society,” Gorin said. “Historically, the parole board does not release people convicted of murder, and this case is no different.

    He called the decision a win for Los Angeles Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman, who has opposed the brothers’ release.

    The brothers were initially sentenced to life without the possibility of parole for the killings of their parents Jose and Kitty Menendez, but after qualifying for resentencing they gained a chance at freedom.

    Many family members have supported their cause, but the gruesome crime and the brothers’ conduct behind bars led to pushback against their release.

    The killings occurred after the brothers purchased shotguns in San Diego with a false identification and shot their parents in the family living room.

    The bloody crime scene was compared by investigators to a gangland execution, where Jose Menendez was shot five times, including once in the back of the head. Evidence showed their mother had crawled, wounded, on the floor before the brothers reloaded and fired a final, fatal blast.

    The brothers reported the killings to 911, according to court records. Soon afterward, prosecutors during the trial noted, the two siblings began to spend large sums of money, including buying a Porsche and a restaurant, which was purchased by Lyle. Erik bought a Jeep and hired a private tennis instructor.

    Prosecutors argued it was access to their multimillion-dollar inheritance that prompted the killing after Jose Menendez shared that he planned to disinherit the brothers.

    But during the trials, the Menendez brothers and relatives testified that the two siblings had undergone years of sexual and physical abuse at the hands of their father.

    In contrast to their frenzy around their trial, Thursday and Friday’s parole hearings were quiet — yet occasionally contentious — affairs.

    A Times journalist was the only member of the public allowed to view the hearing on a projector screen in a room inside the agency’s headquarters outside of Sacramento.

    During the Friday hearing, the parole board quickly dived into the allegations that the brothers were sexually assaulted by their father, which Lyle Menendez said confused and “caused a lot of shame in me.”

    “That pretty much characterized my relationship with my father,” he said, adding that the fear of being abused left him in a state of “hyper vigilance,” even after the abuse stopped and his father began to abuse Erik.

    “It took me a while to realize that it stopped,” Menendez said. “I think I was still worried about it for a long time.”

    Growing up, he said, taking care of his younger brother gave him purpose, and helped to protect him from “drowning in the spiral of my own life.”

    Menendez alleged his mother also sexually abused him, but said he did not share it during his comprehensive risk assessment because he “didn’t see it as abuse really.”

    “Today, I see it as sexual abuse,” he said. “When I was 13, I felt like I was consenting and my mother was dealing with a lot and I just felt like maybe it wasn’t.”

    Board members also questioned Lyle Menendez on why he didn’t mention the possibility they were removed from their parents’ will in their submissions to the board, but Menendez contended their inheritance was not a motive in the killings.

    Instead, he said, it became “a problem afterward” as they worried they would have no money after their parents’ deaths.

    “I believe there was a will that disinherited us somewhere,” he said.

    The result of Thursday’s hearing means Erik can’t seek parole again for three years, a decision that left some relatives and supporters of the younger brother stunned.

    “How is my dad a threat to society,” Talia Menendez, his stepdaughter, wrote on Instagram shortly after the decision was made. “This has been torture to our family. How much longer???”

    In a statement issued Thursday, relatives said they were disappointed by the decision and noted that going through Lyle’s hearing Friday would be “undoubtedly difficult,” although they remained “cautiously optimistic and hopeful.”

    Friends, relatives and former cellmates have touted the brothers’ lives behind bars, pointing to programs they’ve spearheaded for inmates, including classes for anger management, meditation, and helping inmates in hospice care.

    But members of the board questioned both siblings about their violation of rules, zeroing in at times about repeated use of contraband cellphones.

    During the hearing Friday, Lyle said he sometimes used cellphones to keep in touch with family outside the prison. But Deputy Parole Commissioner Patrick Reardon questioned this explanation, and asked why Menendez needed a cellphone if he could make legitimate calls from a prison-issued tablet.

    The rule violation, board members pointed out, had resulted in Menendez being barred from family visits for three years.

    Reardon pointed out that Menendez pleaded guilty to two cellphone violations in November 2024 and in March 2025. Menendez was also linked to three other violations, although another cellmate of his took responsibility for those violations.

    Menendez said the violations occurred when he lived in a dorm with five other inmates, and admitted the use of cellphones was a “gang-like activity.” The group, he said, probably went through at least five cellphones.

    Heidi Rummel, Menendez’s parole attorney, argued in her closing that despite the cellphone issues, Menendez had no violent incidents on his prison record.

    “This board is going to say you’re dangerous because you used your cellphones,” she said. “But there is zero evidence that he used it for criminality, that he used it for violence. He didn’t even lie about it.”

    But members of the board repeatedly focused on what seemed to be issues of credibility. Reardon said at times it felt like Menendez was “two different incarcerated people.”

    “You seem to be different things at different times,” Reardon said during the hearing. “I don’t think what I see is that you used a cellphone from time to time. There seems to be a mechanism in place that you always had a cellphone.”

    Garland asked Menendez about whether he used his position on the Men’s Advisory Council — a group meant to be a liaison on issues between inmates and prison administrators — to manipulate others and gain unfair benefits.

    Menendez said the position gave him access to wall phones, and used the position to help him barter or gain favors.

    Garland also pointed to an assessment that found Menendez exhibited antisocial traits, entitlement, deception, manipulation and a resistance to accept consequences.

    Menendez said he had discussed those issues, but that he didn’t agree he showed narcissistic traits.

    “They’re not the type of people like me self-referring to mental health,” he said, adding that he felt his father displayed narcissistic tendencies and lack of self-reflection. “I just felt like that wasn’t me.”

    Menendez pointed to his work to help inmates in prison who are bullied or mocked.

    “I would never call myself a model incarcerated person,” he said. “I would say that I’m a good person, that I spent my time helping people. That I’m very open and accepting.”

    The parole board applauded Menendez’s work and educational history while in prison, noting he was working on a master’s degree.

    Despite the violations, Menendez argued he felt he had done good work in prison.

    “My life has been defined by extreme violence,” he said, tears visible on his face. “I wanted to be defined by something else.”

    James Queally, Salvador Hernandez, Richard Winton

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  • Virginia Governor Reportedly Issues Executive Order To Restrict Cell Phone Use In Public Schools

    Virginia Governor Reportedly Issues Executive Order To Restrict Cell Phone Use In Public Schools

    Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin has issued an executive order to restrict the use of cell phones in public schools.

    RELATED: White West Virginia Couple In Jail Amid Charges For Human Trafficking Of Black Adopted Children

    More Details On The Executive Order Passed By The Virginia Governor

    According to CNN, Gov Youngkin issued the executive order on Tuesday, July 9. The outlet reports that the legislation intends to “limit or ban cell phone use in public schools.” Additionally, the order reportedly requires the Virginia Department of Education to “establish guidelines for a cell phone-free education.”

    The outlet reports that Gov. Youngkin believes the decision is an “essential action” to “promote a healthier and more focused educational environment.”

    “Creating cell phone and social media-free educational environments in Virginia’s K-12 education system will benefit students, parents, and educators,” Youngkin reportedly explained. “Today’s Executive Order both establishes the clear goal to protect the health and safety of our students by limiting the amount of time they are exposed to addictive cell phones and social media and eliminates clear distractions in the classroom.”

    According to the outlet, Virginia isn’t the only place where schools have vowed to place limits on cell phone use. CNN reports that last month, the New York City Public Schools and the Los Angeles Unified School District announced that “they would similarly move to limit cell phones in their schools.”

    When Will The Order Go Into Effect & What’s The Reaction So Far?

    According to the outlet, a draft of Virginia’s new cell phone policy in public schools is reportedly expected to be submitted by August 15. Final adjustments should be made by September, and the policy should go into full effect by January 1, 2025.

    WAVY adds that school districts within the state have already begun discussing the new policy. Furthermore, the outlet reports that Virginia Beach City Public Schools have already implemented a cell phone ban. However, it still poses challenges and requires equal support from school officials and parents.

    “Our teachers work hard to address it,” Virginia Beach City Public Schools Chief School Officer Matthew Delaney told the outlet. “They work with our families to address it collectively. We believe the adults have to come together to support our teachers in creating the best learning environment for our kids.”

    Donald Robertson, the superintendent of VBCPS, says their policy does not require cell phones to be confiscated from students. Instead, it expects “students to be off of them during instructional time.”

    According to WSLS, schools in Roanoke, Virginia, which have also implemented a similar policy, are now determining whether they should up the ante and restrict cell phones from classrooms “entirely.” The outlet adds that Roanoke County Schools has sent a survey to parents for their input on the matter.

    Cell Phone Use Recently Came Between THIS Rapper & A Crowd At Essence Fest

    It appears that the issue of heavy cell phone use is not only a problem in classrooms. As The Shade Room previously reported, earlier this month, Busta Rhymes went off on a crowd at Essence Fest for being too distracted by their phones during his performance.

    “Ayo, f**k those camera phones too, let’s get back to interacting as humans,” the rapper emphatically told the crowd. “Put those weird a** devices down! I ain’t from that era… F**k your phone!”

    Watch the viral moment below.

    RELATED: WHEW! Busta Rhymes Goes OFF On Crowd For Being On Their Cellphones During His Essence Fest Performance (WATCH)

     

    What Do You Think Roomies?

    Jadriena Solomon

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  • Bay Area residents outraged over possibly losing landlines: Here’s more on effort to save them

    Bay Area residents outraged over possibly losing landlines: Here’s more on effort to save them

    WOODSIDE, Calif. (KGO) — San Mateo County officials are meeting with AT&T representatives on Monday to talk about the carrier of last resort’s proposal to end landline service to thousands of California customers.

    The beauty of Woodside is certainly something to talk about, but talking by phone from Woodside is another story.

    Bree-Anna Vail has lived in the town 29 years and she has the relics to prove it.

    “We have wired in a landline here and it’s a candlestick phone, an antique phone and it’s wired so you can dial the rotary,” said Vail.

    Beyond entertainment purposes, the Vail family needs a landline.

    “We do have power when the power is out because we have a generator that powers the whole home,” said Vail.

    But the generator doesn’t power the WiFi router, which the Vails need to use a cellphone inside their home.

    “This is my new generator,” said Vail.

    “We have about an hour and a half of time and then the wifi goes out, we have no television, we have no computer, we have no phones, we have nothing,” she continued.

    Which is why San Mateo County District 3 Supervisor Ray Meuller says county officials are meeting with AT&T to better understand what’s going on.

    MORE: AT&T nationwide outage caused by software update, not malicious intent: Sources

    The AT&T nationwide outage was caused by a software update gone wrong, not malicious intent, sources tell ABC News.

    According to the California Public Utilities Commission, AT&T has submitted two proposals to remove its obligation to provide voice services in its service territories.

    “It’s about someone who’s sitting there in a natural hazard scenario with a fire bearing down on them or completely cut off in a storm system who may have other ailments not being able to reach out and call 911 because they have no means of communication they’re completely isolated,” said Meuller.

    “So last year, we had an eight day outage, there are seven days we would not have any kind of communication for police, fire or ambulance,” said Vail.

    “We’re getting up in years and we think it’s important for us to be able to call for medical attention and fire department and police and those kinds of things,” said Robert Vail.

    Last month, AT&T’s wireless network went down for customers across the U.S.

    Thomas Steed is the Chairman of the Association of BellTel Retirees.

    “If the entire electrical grid in the United States went dark, your landline phones will still work because our central office generates our own power automatically,” said Steed.

    MORE: AT&T offers $5 account credit to customers affected by nationwide cellular outage

    In an emailed statement, AT&T tells ABC7 News it is not cancelling landline service in California, writing: “No customer will be disconnected, and we’re working with the remaining consumers who use traditional landline service to upgrade to newer technologies.”

    “But that broadband internet goes out in these natural hazard events,” said Meuller.

    Which is why opponents like the Vail family say landlines should be here to stay.

    The San Mateo Board of Supervisors meeting is open to the public at 9 a.m. on Tuesday.

    There’s also a California Public Utilities Commission virtual public hearing on March 19.

    MORE: Comcast says parts of its plant were damaged during the weekend storm

    Those in the Peninsula are still dealing with problems because of the storms we’ve seen.

    AT&T’s full statement here:

    “We are not cancelling landline service in California, and none of our California customers will lose access to voice service or 911 service. For customers who do not have alternative options available yet, we will continue to provide their existing voice service as long as is needed. No customer will be disconnected, and we’re working with the remaining consumers who use traditional landline service to upgrade to newer technologies.”

    Additional info from AT&T:

    • Fiber and wireless-based networks are faster, more reliable, use less energy and require less maintenance over time.
    • Fewer than 5% of households we serve in California use copper-based landline phone service.
    • We are focused on enhancing our network with more advanced, higher speed technologies like fiber and wireless, which consumers are increasingly demanding over outdated copper-based services.
    • During climate disasters, when staying connected is essential, our fiber network is more resilient and reliable than our outdated copper network.
    • Old copper cables take significantly longer to repair following weather events, in some cases taking weeks to dry because of damage due to extensive rain and flooding.
    • We operate landline networks in 21 states across the country, and 20 of those states have already allowed us to transition from outdated copper technologies to more modern services like fiber and wireless, and none of our traditional landline customers lost service as a result.
    • Our application with the CPUC is just the first step of a multi-year process to phase out copper-based landline phone service as demand for it continues to decline. In California, 99.7 percent of consumers within our service territory have at least three facilities-based alternative options for voice service. We are committed to bringing more modern services to California that the public needs and wants.

    If you’re on the ABC7 News app, click here to watch live

    Copyright © 2024 KGO-TV. All Rights Reserved.

    Melanie Woodrow

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  • Major outage plagues AT&T cellphone users

    Major outage plagues AT&T cellphone users

    ORLANDO, Fla. – A massive cellphone outage has been reported in the U.S. by AT&T customers.

    Starting early Thursday, AT&T customers started seeing the service on their phones switch to SOS mode, which means only emergency calls can be made.

    AT&T has yet to comment about the outage, the cause of which is unknown.

    In Central Florida, the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office posted on X that AT&T customers who have an emergency should send a text message to 911.

    On a smaller scale, outages were also reported by users of Cricket Wireless, Verizon and T-Mobile,

    Check back for updates.

    Copyright 2024 by WKMG ClickOrlando – All rights reserved.

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