{"id":2159,"date":"2026-06-19T22:10:07","date_gmt":"2026-06-19T22:10:07","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/uspropertymoves.com\/?p=2159"},"modified":"2026-06-19T22:10:07","modified_gmt":"2026-06-19T22:10:07","slug":"the-global-rush-to-ban-kids-from-social-media-has-begun-will-it-work","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/uspropertymoves.com\/?p=2159","title":{"rendered":"The Global Rush to Ban Kids From Social Media Has Begun. Will It Work?"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<!-- do not apply CSS styles to this element! --><\/p>\n<div>\n<p>\n\tIt\u2019s been a busy week for social media bans. On Monday, the U.K. unveiled plans for a sweeping restriction on under-16s using TikTok, Facebook and similar platforms, and Canada is following suit, pushing its own legislation through parliament.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/uspropertymoves.com\/?p=2158\">\u201cWe Lost a Giant\u201d: James Burrows Mourned by Eric McCormack, NBC<\/a><\/p>\n<p>\n\tBoth the British and Canadian proposals are modeled on Australia\u2019s under-16s ban, the first of its kind in the world, which came into effect in December. Half a year into the experiment down under, the rest of the world is watching closely. From Paris to Ankara, Brussels to Jakarta, governments worldwide are converging on the same idea: to keep kids safe from the harms of social media, they need to be kept off it.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tWhether that approach actually works is another matter.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tAustralia remains the test case. Its Online Safety Amendment forces online platforms to block accounts from under-16s or face fines of up to AUD 49.5 million ($34.7 million) per offense. It was sold as the toughest child-safety law in the world.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tGovernments backing such measures point to a growing body of research linking certain patterns of social media use to mental-health problems, body-image concerns, cyberbullying and sleep disruption among young people. But six months into Australia\u2019s experiment, questions remain about whether blanket bans are the most effective response.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThe country\u2019s eSafety Commissioner has acknowledged that some young people are already finding ways around the restrictions. Researchers tracking the rollout have documented teens reaching for VPNs, borrowed devices and a growing constellation of unregulated platforms that don\u2019t bother with age checks at all.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tCanada is watching Australia\u2019s experience closely and pressing ahead anyway. Bill C-34, the proposed Safe and Secure Digital Services Act, would limit risks and harms to children under 16 from social platforms, chatbots and other online services, introduce direct safety duties on operators of regulated services, and create a new Digital Safety Commission to enforce the framework once it becomes law.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThe bill has already drawn skepticism from internet and e-commerce law experts taking stock of what it could \u2014 and couldn\u2019t \u2014 accomplish.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tMichael Geist, a law professor at the University of Ottawa, tells The Hollywood Reporter he expects Canada\u2019s proposed social media ban to fail, and to bring unintended consequences with it.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cThe experience to date elsewhere suggests that bans can be easily circumvented and that kids gravitate to riskier, less regulated platforms. And because verifying who is under 16 means verifying everyone, this is a population-wide ID mandate,\u201d Geist says. \u201cThe real solution lies in addressing the harms from social media for all users. The bill has that with its duty to act responsibly, but the ban soaks up the headlines and causes more harm than good.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\n\tGeist is equally uneasy about the bill\u2019s plan to hand enforcement to a brand-new regulator rather than Canada\u2019s existing telecom and broadcast watchdog.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cI am deeply concerned by the regulator, which strikes me as overreach, not oversight,\u201d he says. \u201cThe Digital Safety Commission is a super-regulator [that] would have more direct reach into the daily lives of ordinary Canadians than [broadcast watchdog] CRTC. It writes the rules, enforces them, and is supposed to advocate for the very users it polices, all in one body that isn\u2019t bound by the rules of evidence and can hold its hearings in secret.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\n\tCatherine Warren, president of digital consultancy group Fan Trust, takes a different angle, arguing the goal should be setting boundaries for platforms rather than imposing rigid rules that tech-savvy kids can sidestep.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cLet\u2019s be clear-eyed: children are being harmed online, and families are grieving. That\u2019s exactly why the Canadian response has to work, not just feel decisive,\u201d Warren says.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tFor Warren, the core issue isn\u2019t that children go online \u2014 it\u2019s that platforms are engineered to be addictive, built around infinite scrolling and AI chatbots whose risks to young users have proven difficult to rein in.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cWhen we wanted children safe in the water, we didn\u2019t drain the pool. We fenced it, taught them to swim and posted a lifeguard,\u201d she says.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tShe also warns that a blanket Canadian ban could deepen inequality, since wealthier families can more easily afford VPNs to mask their children\u2019s location and bypass restrictions.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cA ban that some children can trick with a VPN isn\u2019t child safety, it\u2019s a class filter, where the families with the most beat the system, while the kids with the least \u2014 and perhaps the greatest need for online connection, community and education \u2014 are cut off,\u201d Warren says.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThat skepticism toward blanket bans is shared on the other side of the Atlantic.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cFrom a legal standpoint, [blanket bans] carry more risks than benefits,\u201d says Stephan Dreyer, senior researcher at the Leibniz Institute for Media Studies. \u201cWe still don\u2019t have studies that actually demonstrate a social media ban leads to improved mental health.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/uspropertymoves.com\/?p=2156\">Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Sophia Bush Defend Ties to Peter Thiel\u2019s Secretive Dialog Group<\/a><\/p>\n<p>\n\tWhen young people are asked what worries them most, Dreyer says, \u201cit isn\u2019t the content on social media \u2014 it\u2019s crises, the environment, migration, fear of illness in the family. Social media can certainly present these things, perhaps even amplify them, but it isn\u2019t the cause.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\n\tRestricting access, he warns, can push children toward other online services that are less regulated and potentially more dangerous.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThose concerns haven\u2019t stopped European parliaments from pushing for their own versions of an Australian-style ban. Several EU nations have legislation on the way. But the continent is not moving in lockstep: France has settled on 15 as its cutoff, Austria on 14, Greece and Spain on 16.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tMore significant than the different age thresholds, Dreyer argues, is a legal complication largely missing from the public debate. The EU\u2019s Digital Services Act already governs how platforms must protect minors, and under EU law it takes precedence over conflicting national rules.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cThe DSA actually blocks national rules from member states,\u201d he says, \u201cand most member states haven\u2019t accounted for that in their plans so far.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\n\tHe points to France and Greece as countries that have tried to work around this. France\u2019s rule barring under-15s from social media, for instance, doesn\u2019t specify who is actually obligated to enforce it, since naming platforms as the responsible party would trigger a direct conflict with EU law.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThe European Commission is trying to prove the DSA has teeth. It has targeted TikTok for allegedly violating DSA safety rules with \u201caddictive\u201d design features, including its infinite scroll, and Facebook parent Meta for not adequately protecting children from cyberbullying and grooming on its platform.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tIf found permanently in breach of the DSA, platforms face severe penalties, including fines of up to 6 percent of their total global annual turnover. But many European parents \u2014 and politicians \u2014 are frustrated by the pace of enforcement.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cMember states have grown impatient with how the DSA is being enforced,\u201d says Dreyer. He sees the new bans as an effort by member states to put political pressure on Brussels to pursue an EU-wide age limit.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tFor Dreyer, the lesson from Australia and Europe is not that governments should abandon regulation, but that they may be focusing on the wrong target.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tInstead of a blanket ban, he argues, regulators should identify and restrict specific harmful features \u2014 infinite scrolling, recommendation algorithms and systems that push age-inappropriate content to minors.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cWe know the risks come from the platforms, not from the children,\u201d he says. \u201cAnd I find it remarkable that we\u2019re having a conversation, in country after country, about excluding children from these services \u2014 because that isn\u2019t normally how we handle this. When we know someone bears responsibility for a danger, we go to that person and say: address the risk, eliminate the danger.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\n\tThe challenge for lawmakers is finding the right balance between reducing risks to children and preserving privacy, autonomy and freedom of choice. Few Western democracies are willing to embrace the kind of highly restrictive model that would make circumvention nearly impossible. Yet the more limited and targeted the intervention, the harder it becomes to guarantee meaningful protections.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tChina sits at the far end of that spectrum. The country has built the world\u2019s most comprehensive system of age-based digital regulation, requiring \u2018minor mode\u2019 on devices used by under-18s. Children can only visit approved sites, access social media platforms with heavily restricted features, and have their online gaming capped at three hours per week, in a one-hour window from 8-9 p.m. on Fridays, weekends and holidays.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>\n\tEven so, Dreyer voices guarded optimism. He points to ongoing U.S. litigation against major platforms as a potential source of pressure that could push companies to adjust their products globally, even without new legislation forcing them to.<\/p>\n<p>\n\tHe also flags an unexpected trend: usage time among young people appears to be declining on some platforms, which he attributes partly to growing wariness of AI-generated content.<\/p>\n<p>\n\t\u201cThe more mediocre AI-generated content shows up on these platforms,\u201d he says, \u201cthe more young people say: this isn\u2019t authentic. I want authentic content \u2014 and so they turn to other things instead.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/uspropertymoves.com\/?p=2154\">I Bought a Breathalyzer and Drank Along With the Characters in \u2018Spider-Noir\u2019<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>As Britain and Canada follow Australia\u2019s lead on under-16 social media bans, experts warn the measures may be easy to evade and hard to enforce.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":662,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[1364,1791,2,686,1554,276],"class_list":["post-2159","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-interesting","tag-facebook","tag-instagram","tag-international","tag-social-media","tag-tiktok","tag-youtube"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>The Global Rush to Ban Kids From Social Media Has Begun. 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