Latest
UK to ban social media for under-16s: declares platforms ‘making children unhappy’
In a sweeping move that marks one of the most radical regulatory interventions in the digital age, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced on Monday a forthcoming total ban on social media for children under the age of 16.
Speaking on the psychological toll of digital platforms, Starmer declared that tech giants are actively “making children unhappy” and exposing them to systemic harm.
The proposed legislation will legally bar under-16s from accessing major platforms. The government confirmed the ban will target dominant apps like TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram, Facebook, X (formerly Twitter), and YouTube. Messaging-focused services, such as WhatsApp, will be excluded from the blanket ban.
“We will ban access to social media for all children under the age of 16,” Starmer said, warning that tech platforms are “exposing them to content that is dangerous” and purposefully “designed to be addictive.”
The Prime Minister outlined an aggressive timeline for the policy, aiming to pass the regulation by late December 2026, with the historic ban coming into full force by Spring 2027.
The crackdown will not stop at social media. Starmer revealed that the government plans to take “world-leading action on gaming services and live streaming platforms,” explicitly targeting spaces where online predators can easily interact with minors.
READ ALSO: London man sentenced to life for murder of friend in deadly debt dispute
“Is there a situation in the offline world where you would just let your child pair up with a stranger? An adult that you don’t know about? No. So we’re taking action on that,” Starmer said, though he stopped short of providing specific operational details.
Furthermore, Downing Street released a statement indicating that the government is actively considering mandatory overnight curfews for under-18s and legally enforced breaks to stop “infinite scrolling” features. A comprehensive policy framework detailing these measures is slated for release in July.
The UK’s decisive move follows an overwhelming government-led consultation that closed in late May, drawing roughly 116,000 contributions—making it the second-largest public response in British political history. The data revealed deep parental anxiety: over 83 percent of responding parents stated that the risks of social media heavily outweighed the benefits, while 91 percent actively backed a minimum age limit of 16. The consultation also involved trial bans and app time limits tested by British teenagers themselves.
Starmer acknowledged that the UK’s strategy was heavily influenced by Australia, which became the first nation to pass a law banning under-16s from social media.
Just last week, Canada’s Culture Minister introduced the Digital Safety Act, which bans social media for under-16s and forces AI chatbot services to restrict harmful content generation.
-
Business6 days agoThe Pros and Cons of Nigeria’s $10bn Surge in Capital Importation
-
Featured2 days agoTwo arrested after England team equipment stolen ahead of World Cup opener
-
Business4 days agoGround handlers suspend services to Max Air over unpaid debts
-
Latest6 days agoKwankwasiyya dismisses reports of Kwankwaso’s exit from NDC
-
Featured6 days agoNigeria must move beyond zoning, choose leaders based on competence ahead of 2027 – Baba-Ahmed
-
Football1 week agoChristian Eriksen stable after collapsing during Denmark–Ukraine friendly
-
Latest5 days agoReps bar first-term lawmakers, block Ugochinyere’s bid for minority leader
-
Aviation4 days agoNSIB recovers black boxes as probe deepens into private jet’s highway landing in Delta

