"I remember a marked way difference in the way I thought about the world before I had kids and after I had kids,"
"'I want everything all the time. I'll give away all my privacy. I don't care what happens with all this data,'"
"'As soon as you have kids and you start hearing about deepfakes, and you start hearing about social engineering, and you start hearing about all this other stuff, you start changing your view on how much data you want sucked up and how you're being protected.'"
"'Having kids does change how you think about the world in a pretty dramatic way,'"
Many tech founders adjust their views on privacy after becoming parents. Pre-parenthood attitudes often favor convenience and broad data sharing. Parenthood brings heightened concern about deepfakes, social engineering, and how collected data could affect children and families. Major tech leaders who become parents tend to rethink trade-offs between functionality and protection. The rise of AI-enabled devices intensifies these considerations by introducing new privacy and safety risks. As a result, priorities shift toward limiting data collection and improving safeguards to better protect family members and reduce potential harms.
Read at Business Insider
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