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Here is how social media platforms, experts and civil society groups have reacted to the UK’s proposal of banning social media access for children:
Signal would exit the UK if it had to ‘verify’ its users: “We would rather exit a market than undermine the technical guarantees that people trust for their privacy. That doesn’t change based on jurisdiction, it doesn’t change based on year, and it’s not something we take lightly. We’re not just flexing or being recalcitrant,” said Signal President Meredith Whittaker in Bloomberg’s The Mishal Husain Show. Explore more here: [ Interview clip | Full statement ]
Surveillance attempts in the guise of child protection, Signal states: “Keir Starmer announced what seems to be a fairly hasty proposal to implement nudity scanning as a mandatory feature on all devices sold or used in the UK, where you could only opt out if you provided some sort of verification that you were above a certain age threshold. There are very few technical details on that system. But our position—on client-side scanning, the debate that circled the Online Safety Bill (now Act)—is that this constitutes very dangerous mass surveillance. Having a scanning system on your device that is purportedly designed to detect nudity can easily be weaponized by governments for political speech or other content,” she further added.
How are other social media companies reacting to the UK’s proposed social media ban? Predominantly, social media and communication platforms have argued that outright social media bans will leave children in less regulated or unregulated spaces without parental controls, leading to more risks and harms. Some of the statements made by the big tech companies are:
Telegram’s Durov also said:
TikTok, Discord and Twitch have not made any statement or comments on this particular issue yet.
Author of Anxious Generation welcomes the UK’s decision to ban social media for children: “Well done, UK Govt; well done PM Starmer. UK Parents love the policy, and the evidence keeps mounting that heavy social media use causes a variety of harms,” wrote Jonathan Haidt, psychologist and author of Anxious Generation. Read his article on: The Case Against Social Media: Seven Lines of Evidence.
The harms lie in the platforms’ inherent design, features and functionality: “Such laws do not address the deeper issue, which is to understand how various harms to children’s well-being on social media could stem from the inherent design, features, and functions of digital platforms. Specifically, discussions on age gating fail to consider how social media platforms can be effectively redesigned to be safer, open, and healthy spaces for children,” said SFLC. It further added: “SFLC.in is of the view that such solutions fail to address the core issue, are likely to create more safety risks for children, and effectively undermine children’s rights”
Consultations should not focus primarily on ‘tech-illiterate’ parents: “Please stop asking parents. Parents are tech illiterate, not technical experts and don’t get to decide what the entire country must endure. They also weren’t told that mandatory identity verification would be required for everyone. Poor reporting from the BBC,” said Paul Walsh, a technologist who works on online safety & privacy. He was responding to this report from the BBC.
“A control question should have been “will you submit your ID to access sites on the internet?” I would be very interested then to see what, if any, discrepancy there was,” argued Prateek Waghre elsewhere. He is a technology researcher.
Also read MediaNama’s coverage of the key findings of the UK’s public consultation here.
Social media ban will impact vital use cases of disabled children: “We are mindful that this ban risks cutting off vital routes to connection for children who are already too often excluded. We are actively looking at ways to counter the impact this could have,” says the UK-based Royal Society for Blind Children.
Platforms should change first; UK govt and Ofcom should hold them responsible for deceptive design: “Real change must come from the platforms themselves. Tech companies must be held accountable by Government and Ofcom for their harmful design choices, their reckless algorithms, and their failure to take responsibility for dangerous content. Children and young people deserve stronger protections and age-appropriate experiences, which recognise the realities of their lives,” said Chris Sherwood, CEO of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC ). Access the full letter signed by 42 child protection charities and online safety groups here: [ PDF ]
Why is the UK pursuing a ban despite its age-appropriate design code? “If the age-appropriate design code was such a success why is the UK government going all in on a ban? I’ve seen a number of people praise this code, and I could never quite understand why (in practical terms),” asked Prateek Waghre on X. Explore the full code here.
He also argued: “Australia’s example already shows circumvention is trivial. Evidence is mixed. Harms and benefits cannot be netted out the way politicians want just to say they’ve done something. Right now, what we’re getting is an age gate for internet and a future with escalating restrictions on things like VPNs, Tor, etc. There are issues, but national-level bans are not the answer.” Read his full article here: Locking Out: Why Blanket Social Media Bans Won’t Protect Children
Bans without platform-level reforms will still open the harms to everyone: “An age limit may change when children reach these platforms, not what is waiting for them when they do. If harmful content is not removed and the algorithms that recommend it are not made safer, the same risks remain in place for every young person once they turn 16 or find a way around the limit sooner. Restricting individual access without regulating the platforms themselves won’t solve these problems. A ban also risks taking away the protective parts of these spaces along with the harmful ones,” said Dr Holly Bear, Senior Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Oxford. Read Science Media Centre’s compilation of expert reactions to the social media ban here.
Govt-mandated logins will enable mass surveillance, and platforms-led verification will lead to massive data collection and privacy violations: “The most obvious way to do this would be a government-mediated login system. This would essentially grant government an immense amount of metadata about who logs in to what, how often, etc…. The instinct to protect children is good, but we cannot protect them by quietly dismantling the privacy and freedom of the entire society. The cure must not be worse than the disease,” wrote Luke Neilson and Mike Campbell. They vice president and director of research and education at the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms. Read the full column here: A Social Media Ban for Minors Requires Data From Everyone
“‘Protect the children’ too often becomes ‘show me your papers.’ Britain’s age-verification push and Washington’s online-safety bargain risk building speech-control infrastructure in the name of safety,” wrote Greg Lukianoff, CEO of FIRE, a US-based free speech advocacy group.
UK law professor warns about the overarching powers of the Commission, including secret investigations & hearings: “The Digital Safety Commission of Canada will be a super-regulator of the Internet, with greater influence over the daily lives of Canadians than perhaps any other regulator in the country. The breadth of its influence can’t be overstated: it will set the standards that millions of Canadians must satisfy to verify their age in order to use social media services. It will establish what platforms must do about harmful content, including the removal of certain material. It will determine whether the age-gating requirement may be lifted for any given service. It will both regulate the platforms and advocate for their users, dual roles that raise obvious fairness concerns. And it will exercise investigative and adjudicative powers, complete with penalties, hearings, and formal, law-enforcement-style investigations. Yet despite all those powers, it will not be bound by the rules of evidence, will be free to conduct its hearings in secret, and, at least in the beginning, will be capable of operating as a one-person body in which the Commission and its Chair are one and the same individual. The full scope of the new powers is illustrated in the infographic below,” wrote Michael Geist, a law professor at the University of Ottawa. He also heads the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law.

UK Parliament to debate the petition against social media ban: In February, shortly after the UK PM announced that they’d pursue a social media ban for children, Leo Rhodes opened a petition on the UK Parliament website. It had about 1,88,372 signatures at the time of writing this report. This figure exceeds the number of respondents (1,16,211) during the UK’s public consultation process. The petition remains open until August 11, 2026.
Important reads:
Read MediaNama’s reporting of the roundtable discussion on “Age Verification and Restricting Social Media for Children” here,
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