The Borneo Post

Florida lawmakers pass kids’ social media ban

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Florida lawmakers moved Thursday toward enacting one of the strictest bans on children’s use of social media in the United States, sending to the governor a bill to keep those under 16 off such platforms.

The controvers­ial legislatio­n seeks to protect children’s mental health against the ‘addictive features’ of such platforms, amid fears over online dangers including from sexual predators, cyber bullying and teen suicide.

The legislatio­n cleared the state Senate 23-14 and returned to the House, where it passed overwhelmi­ngly, 108-7.

It now heads to the governor’s mansion where, to become law, it needs to be signed by Republican Governor Ron DeSantis, who has expressed skepticism about the legislatio­n. Similar efforts by other states have previously been blocked by courts.

“We’re talking about businesses that are using addictive features to engage in mass manipulati­on of our children to cause them harm,” the bill’s sponsor, Republican Erin Grall, told the Florida Senate on Thursday. But DeSantis, who has previously said he is sympatheti­c to fears over the impact of social media on children, voiced concerns about parental rights.

“A parent has the right to opt in,” he told a press conference Thursday.

The governor, who ran an unsuccessf­ul campaign for president and dropped out in January, has argued many times that parents should have more control over decisions affecting their children, particular­ly in education.

Under DeSantis Florida has passed laws to curtail teaching about sex education and gender identity in schools and to eradicate diversity programmes in state-funded universiti­es.

Some critics say such a law targeting social media use would violate the First Amendment of the US Constituti­on, which guarantees freedom of speech.

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