
Government vows to bring in under-16 social media restrictions by end of year
Government vows to bring in under-16 social media restrictions by end of year32 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleLiv McMahon ,technology reporterandZoe Kleinman ,technology editorGetty ImagesNew measures...
Breaking news from the markets: Government vows to bring in under-16 social media restrictions by end of year32 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleLiv McMahon ,technology reporterandZoe Kleinman ,technology editorGetty ImagesNew measures on social media for under-16s will be brought in by the end of the year, Technology Secretary Liz Kendall has said, as a government consultation on the matter comes to an end. Banning social media for children, as has happened in Australia, is one of the options being considered. Kendall said a response to the consultation would come in the summer, with action taken by the end of the year.
Campaigners are split on whether an outright ban on social apps for children is the best approach. Since March, the government has been asking parents and children if measures including app curfews and stronger age checks would improve online safety, and trialled these in some UK homes. "The question isn't whether we're going to act - we will," Kendall told the .
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She said the government's scope was looking at a broad range of issues and features and how these impact children. This could see the UK look more closely at platforms not covered by Australia's restrictions, such as Roblox and Discord. But Kendall said the government wanted to hear "all views" from the consultation, which closes at the end of Tuesday.
"We've got to get this right, and we've got to make it last," she added. The consultation has seen 70,000 submissions from charities, campaign groups and members of the public, giving their views on a ban or other interventions. Potential restrictions include night-time curfews or features such as auto-play and infinite scroll being disabled.
People were also asked for opinions on children's access to AI chatbots, and if enforcement of age checks should be strengthened. The government is learning lessons from Australia's social media ban, Liz Kendall told BreakfastSome groups have backed a ban - including police leaders, who said any platform which does not axe certain features should be banned for under-16s. Ellen Roome's son Jools died at the age of 14, in 2022.
She is among bereaved families and campaigners who will meet Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer on Tuesday to urge the government to demand he swiftly raises the age of access for social media platforms deemed harmful to 16. "Later today, I, and other families who have lost children to social media, will tell the prime minister directly: social media is a product, and like any other faulty product causing the deaths of children, it should be restricted until the companies responsible have fixed it and proven it is safe," Ellen said. Lord Nash, a former Conservative education minister, said his message to the government on its promise to tackle social media harms was simple: "The government gave a commitment to Parliament that they would introduce some form of age or functionality restriction on social media for children under 16.
Economists are analysing what the news means for the markets.


