Spain to Ban Under-16s from Social Media in Major Child Safety Push

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez has announced a plan to ban children under 16 from accessing social media platforms, requiring companies to implement robust age-verification systems. The measure, expected to be approved next week, is part of a broader European trend, with Denmark and France pursuing similar restrictions. The ban forms part of a wider digital reform package aiming to hold social media executives accountable and criminalize algorithms that amplify unlawful content. The European Commission supports these efforts, having recently fined platform X for transparency failures under the Digital Services Act.

Key Points: Spain Plans Social Media Ban for Children Under 16

  • Ban for under-16s
  • Strict age verification required
  • Part of wider EU regulatory push
  • Holds platforms legally accountable
  • Criminalizes harmful algorithm manipulation
2 min read

Spain moves to ban social media access for children under 16

Spanish PM announces ban on social media for under-16s, requiring strict age verification. Part of wider EU push for child online safety.

"Platforms will be required to implement effective age verification systems--not just check boxes, but real barriers that work. - Pedro Sanchez"

Dubai, February 4

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez on Tuesday announced that his government plans to ban children under 16 from accessing social media platforms, citing concerns about online safety and harmful digital content, Politico reported.

Speaking at the World Government Summit in Dubai, Sanchez said social media companies would be required to introduce robust age-verification mechanisms to enforce the restriction.

"Platforms will be required to implement effective age verification systems--not just check boxes, but real barriers that work," he said, as quoted by Politico, adding that children are currently exposed to a digital environment they are not meant to "navigate alone."

The proposed measure is expected to be approved by Spain's Council of Ministers next week and would amend a draft bill currently under discussion in parliament.

While existing legislation seeks to limit social media access to users aged 16 and above, the revised proposal would explicitly prohibit minors from registering on such platforms, Politico reported.

Spain's move comes amid a broader European push to tighten regulations on children's online activity.

According to Politico, Denmark has announced plans to bar under-15s from social media, while France is working toward implementing similar restrictions.

In Portugal, draft legislation has been introduced that would require parental consent for minors under 16 to access social media platforms.

Sanchez said the ban forms part of a wider package of digital reforms aimed at "regaining control" of online spaces.

These include proposals to hold social media executives legally accountable for content hosted on their platforms, introduce tools to track the spread of disinformation, hate speech, and child exploitation material, and criminalise the manipulation of algorithms that amplify unlawful content, according to Politico.

"We will investigate platforms whose algorithms amplify disinformation in exchange for profit," Sanchez said, as quoted by Politico, stressing that spreading hate online must carry legal, economic, and ethical consequences.

Under the European Union's Digital Services Act (DSA), platforms are already required to mitigate risks arising from harmful online content. Responding to Sanchez's announcement, European Commission spokesperson Thomas Regnier said the Commission works closely with EU member states to ensure child protection online, noting that enforcement actions against major platforms fall under the Commission's mandate.

In December, the European Commission imposed a EUR 120 million fine on social media platform X for failing to meet transparency requirements, while investigations into its handling of illegal content and disinformation remain ongoing, as reported by Politico.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul R
While the intention is good, a blanket ban feels impractical. What about educational or creative content? The focus should be on digital literacy in schools and empowering parents, not just cutting off access. We need a balanced approach in India.
A
Arun Y
Europe is leading the way on this. In our Indian context, social media platforms are a free-for-all. Holding executives accountable for hate speech and disinformation is crucial. We need our own strong data protection and online safety laws, urgently.
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Sarah B
As a parent, I welcome this. The online world is scary for kids. But the real challenge is enforcement. How will they implement "real barriers" for age verification? If Spain can make it work, it sets a powerful global precedent.
V
Vikram M
Good move, but what about the digital divide? In India, many teenagers use social media for learning and opportunities. A complete ban might hurt those from smaller towns. Regulation yes, but access with guidance is key.
K
Kavya N
Finally! The mental health impact on our youth is huge. Seeing perfect lives online creates anxiety. If European countries are uniting on this, India's policymakers should seriously study this model. Our children's childhood needs protection.

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