Keir Starmer is facing calls from across the political spectrum to follow Australia’s lead in banning children under the age of 16 from social media. As the government announces a consultation on the proposal, critics have put forward reasons for ministers to think twice.
What did the commentators say? “Every parent worries desperately about online risks, and they are entirely right to do so,” Ian Russell, whose daughter Molly took her own life after being exposed to online suicide content, said on PoliticsHome. But “parents and children deserve proper, evidence-based solutions”, rather than the “easy fixes” being pushed by politicians “looking to further their own political prospects”. A ban risks causing “more harm than good”, as bad actors “migrate” to other platforms while companies use it “as an excuse not to clean up their act, leaving children at a cliff edge of harm” when they reach 16.
“If there’s one thing more ridiculous than taking a corporate failure and throwing it to the individual to solve”, it is doing so to under-16s, said Zoe Williams in The Guardian. Older people are also the target of “manipulative content” and are the main “misinformation super-spreaders” on social media.
There is “danger in focusing on the wrong war”, said the New Scientist’s editorial board. Politicians warn of the risks of social media yet “rush to embrace AI”, the technology that will have “the largest effect on today’s teens”.
A ban also conveniently ignores the problems in teenagers’ offline social lives, which are as much to blame for “rising distress” as social media, said Chris Stokel-Walker in The Independent. We are “systematically shutting children out of public life”. Youth centres are closing, four in 10 councils “no longer run any youth services at all”, and other spaces “where teenagers once lingered – shopping centres, cafes, parks – are increasingly hostile territory”. For everything outside school and home, in the “in between” where you form friendships and identity, there’s social media. “Banning under-16s would complete the erasure of young people from public life.”
What next? The House of Lords will tomorrow debate an amendment to the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill that would impose a social-media age limit within a year of the bill passing into law. |