Spain announces plans to ban social media for children under 16
by Lisa Hornung · UPIFeb. 3 (UPI) -- Spain announced it will ban social media for children younger than 16 and introduce measures that hold platforms and people accountable.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez spoke at the World Government Summit in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and denounced social media companies' misconduct. He said access for young teens will end next week as part of five new government measures against the platforms.
"Social media has become a failed state, a place where laws are ignored, and crime is endured, where disinformation is worth more than truth, and half of users suffer hate speech," Sanchez said. "A failed state in which algorithms distort the public conversation and our data and image are defied and sold."
He said, "platforms will be required to implement effective age-verification systems -- not just checkboxes, but real barriers that work."
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"Today, our children are exposed to a space they were never meant to navigate alone: a space of addiction, abuse, pornography, manipulation and violence. We will no longer accept that. We will protect them from the digital wild west," Sanchez said.
The first country to ban young teens from social media was Australia, which implemented its new law in December. There is also a measure in the French National Assembly to do the same. Greece, Denmark, Ireland and Great Britain are considering similar laws.
Spain hasn't said which platforms will be subject to the new law. But during his speech, Sanchez criticized TikTok, X and Instagram.
Spain's other measures include developing a "hate and polarization footprint," which would track and quantify how platforms create division and magnify hate. Sanchez said the government will also hold social media executives criminally liable for failure to remove illegal or hateful content.
"We will turn algorithmic manipulation and amplification of illegal content into a new criminal offense," he said in Dubai. "Spreading hate must come at a cost."
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