EU Takes Stand: Protecting Children from Addictive Social Media Designs
The European Union is developing new regulations to shield children from addictive social media platforms like TikTok, Meta, and X. These rules, part of the forthcoming Digital Fairness Act, aim to address harmful design practices and limit artificial intelligence use. The initiative also explores setting a minimum age for social media access.
The European Union is poised to introduce groundbreaking regulations aimed at safeguarding children from the addictive elements of social media platforms. Targeted platforms include popular networks like TikTok, Meta's Facebook and Instagram, and X. This initiative comes from EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen's commitment to counter the growing digital risks, citing sleep deprivation and cyberbullying as notable concerns.
Von der Leyen announced plans to integrate new rules within the Digital Fairness Act (DFA), slated for proposal by year-end. Crucially, these regulations will address harmful design practices and impose stringent artificial intelligence controls, potentially setting a minimum age for accessing social media platforms. Details are pending expert recommendations, with proposals expected this summer.
In an effort to build on the existing Digital Services Act (DSA), the new measures aim to enforce stricter requirements for large platforms to curb illegal and harmful content. Active investigations into firms like TikTok, Meta, and X highlight the Commission's pursuit of compliance, especially regarding age restrictions and AI misuse for creating inappropriate content.
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