#child-online-safety

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fromTechCrunch
4 days ago

Indian states weigh Australia-style ban on social media for children | TechCrunch

India could become the next major test case for age-based social media bans, as states weigh Australia-style restrictions on children's access to platforms amid a growing global regulatory push. The push has begun at the state level, with the western state of Goa becoming the latest to study whether to bar children under 16 from social media platforms. "Australia has brought in a law ensuring a ban on social media for children below the age of 16,"
World news
France news
fromFast Company
4 days ago

France just approved a social media ban for kids under 15

France approved a law banning social media for children under 15 and banning mobile phones in high schools, effective at the start of the next school year.
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Schools in England should be phone-free all day, education secretary says

Schools should be phone-free throughout the entire day, the education secretary has told headteachers in England, stressing that pupils should not use the devices even as calculators or for research. Bridget Phillipson wrote to schools to underline updated guidance issued by the government last week, according to the BBC. Schools should make sure those policies are applied consistently across classes, and at all times and we want parents to back these policies too, Phillipson said.
Education
#social-media-ban
UK news
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 weeks ago

Tech companies' access to UK ministers dwarfs that of child safety groups

Major US tech companies held hundreds of ministerial meetings over two years, gaining far greater government access than child-safety and copyright campaigners.
#social-media-regulation
UK politics
fromwww.bbc.com
2 weeks ago

Use film-style age ratings to limit teens' social media, say Lib Dems

Film-style age ratings would restrict addictive or inappropriate social media to users 16 and over, and platforms with graphic violence or pornography to 18-plus.
US politics
fromFast Company
2 weeks ago

The world is getting tougher on kids' online safety in 2026

Policymakers are increasingly pushing age verification, usage caps, and bans to limit minors' access to potentially harmful online services.
#australia
World news
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

YouTube says it will comply with Australia's under-16s social media ban, with Lemon8 to also restrict access

YouTube will sign out under-16 users in Australia from 10 December to comply with the federal under-16s social media ban.
UK news
fromwww.standard.co.uk
2 months ago

Anti-terror police tell parents don't ignore Adolescence warnings on Black Friday and Cyber Monday

Parents must set parental controls and actively monitor children's devices to prevent exposure to extremist, violent, and terrorist-related online content amid rising Prevent referrals.
fromElectronic Frontier Foundation
2 months ago

Privacy is For the Children (Too)

In the past few years, governments across the world have rolled out different digital identification options, and now there are efforts encouraging online companies to implement identity and age verification requirements with digital ID in mind. This blog is the third in a short series that explains digital ID and the pending use case of age verification. Here, we cover alternative frameworks on age controls, updates on parental controls, and the importance of digital privacy in an increasingly hostile climate politically.
Parenting
fromwww.aljazeera.com
2 months ago

Malaysia says it will ban social media for under-16s from next year

Malaysia plans to ban social media for users under the age of 16 starting from next year, joining a growing list of countries choosing to limit access to digital platforms due to concerns about child safety. Communications Minister Fahmi Fadzil said on Sunday the government was reviewing mechanisms used to impose age restrictions for social media use in Australia and other nations, citing a need to protect youths from online harms such as cyberbullying, financial scams and child sexual abuse.
World news
World news
fromwww.bbc.com
2 months ago

Streaming platform Twitch added to Australia's teen social media ban

Australia will block under-16s from opening Twitch accounts from 10 December and deactivate existing under-16 accounts from 9 January.
fromwww.dw.com
2 months ago

Denmark to ban social media for children under 15 DW 11/07/2025

"As one of the first countries in the EU, Denmark is now taking a groundbreaking step towards introducing age limits on social media," said the country's digitalization ministry in a statement. "This is done to protect children and young people in the digital world." "As a starting point, children under the age of 15 should not have access to platforms that may expose them to harmful content or harmful features," the statement said.
Miscellaneous
Artificial intelligence
fromThe Verge
3 months ago

New California law requires AI to tell you it's AI

California law mandates companion AI chatbots disclose they are not human, implement safety safeguards, and report suicide-prevention measures to the state.
fromeuronews
3 months ago

Australia's social media ban under-16s hard to enforce, Google says

Under the new Australian law, which goes into effect December 10, children under 16 will be unable to create or keep accounts on platforms such as Facebook, X, Snapchat, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube, which is owned by Google. If these platforms are found to be in violation of the law, they could face stiff penalties of 50 million Australian dollars (€28 million). Experts had previously said that the rules will be some of the strictest limits on children's access to social media in the world.
World news
fromwww.bbc.com
4 months ago

Pinterest boss says he thinks about Molly Russell every day

Addressing the case publicly for the first time, Bill Ready - who became Pinterest's boss in 2022 - said he thought about her "every day" and learning the lessons of her death "guides our work". "As a parent of a young daughter, I can't imagine the pain Molly's family feels," he told the BBC. Pinterest has previously acknowledged the platform was not safe at the time of Molly's death. A hearing in 2022 was told that when she first used the platform she was exposed to a wide variety of content but in the months before she took her life that content was much more focussed on depression, self-harm and suicide.
UK politics
fromThe Verge
4 months ago

NY could force TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram to roll out age verification

A New York law could require social media platforms to implement age verification. On Monday, New York Attorney General Letitia James released the proposed rules for the Stop Addictive Feeds Exploitation (SAFE) For Kids Act, which would force platforms to confirm that someone is over 18 before allowing them to access an algorithm-driven feed or nighttime notifications. New York Governor Kathy Hochul signed the SAFE For Kids Act into law last year as part of efforts to "protect the mental health of children."
US politics
fromExchangewire
4 months ago

Digest: Paramount-Skydance Plans Warner Bros. Discovery Bid; FTC Investigates AI Chatbots, France Eyes TikTok Inquiry; Microsoft Endorses OpenAI's For-Profit Move - ExchangeWire.com

As AI technologies evolve, it is important to consider the effects chatbots can have on children, while also ensuring that the United States maintains its role as a global leader in this new and exciting industry. The study we're launching today will help us better understand how AI firms are developing their products and the steps they are taking to protect children.
France news
Parenting
fromFatherly
6 months ago

The Best Apps for Limiting Your Kid's Screen Time

Parental-control apps enable blocking harmful content, enforcing screen-time limits, monitoring location and usage, and providing curated, child-safe digital environments.
Privacy professionals
fromwww.bbc.com
5 months ago

Children at risk of identity theft and fraud from 'sharenting'

Posting children's photos online increases risks of harassment, cyber-bullying, identity theft, and exposure that enables offline or future fraud.
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