Google’s Schmidt: Teens’ mistakes will never go away
Speaking at a festival in the U.K., Google’s executive chairman offers that the things teens do now will stay with them forever, by way of the Web. He also suggested some people are sharing too much online.
by Chris Matyszczyk
May 25, 2013 11:49 AM PDT
It must be peculiar for children of the Internet age.
They are the first to have a complete record of their whole lives. They are the first who’ll be able to offer concrete proof of every one of their days, friends, and actions.
Eric Schmidt worries, however, that they’ll be the first who’ll never be allowed to forget their mistakes.
As the Telegraph reports, Schmidt spoke Saturday at the Hay Festival in the U.K. and offered some sobering thoughts for those addled by online life.
He said: “There are situations in life that it’s better that they don’t exist. Especially if there is stuff you did when you were a teenager. Teenagers are now in an adult world online.”
Some days, you could hardly describe most of what happens online as “adult.” Still, Schmidt says he believes the online world has gone too far in forcing teens to never forget.
In bygone times, he said, they were punished, but allowed to grow beyond youthful indiscretions.
Some might wonder that teenagers aren’t punished enough these days, so the online world acts as a peculiar corrective.
However, my own worry is the use of the word “mistake.”
https://news.cnet.com/8301-17852_3-57586206-71/googles-schmidt-teens-mistakes-will-never-go-away/