Imagine driving your kids through a city plastered with graphic, inappropriate billboards—images that assault their innocence at every turn.
You’d try everything to protect them: blacking out car windows, taking detours. But no matter how hard you try, you can’t shield them entirely.
Now, imagine families petitioning their city council to restrict public obscenity, simply asking for a chance to move through public spaces without fear of exposing their children to harmful imagery.
How do you think the billboard companies would respond? If they’re anything like Big Tech’s reaction to proposed legislation in Congress, they’d unleash a storm of exaggerated claims, lobbyists, and manufactured outrage.
But unlike billboards—which can’t track your kids or target them based on their vulnerabilities—Big Tech knows exactly who your children are, what content…