Scottish Daily Mail

Social media giants ‘exploit our children’

- By Emily Kent Smith Media and Technology Reporter

SOCIAL media giants are exploiting children by hooking them on their sites in a ploy to generate more traffic, warns a report released today.

Companies such as Facebook and Google are putting share price over the future of a generation, according to charity 5Rights, which conducted the research.

Its chairman, a crossbench peer, said tech firms deploy an ‘unfettered use of persuasive design’ that encourages children to keep clicking – and accused them of a ‘cavalier disregard for childhood’.

Baroness Beeban Kidron said children’s rights were being dragged back to the Victorian ages, with tech giants allowed to pull youngsters onto their platforms without worrying about the implicatio­ns.

And she called for social media sites and platforms to come

‘Disregard for childhood’

with the same health warnings as alcohol and gambling in order to protect children – adding that impact assessment­s should be carried out to investigat­e any risks they could pose to children before new features are launched.

‘Every technology is sort of introduced in a blaze of glory and then we work out it has responsibi­lities,’ she said.

‘Tech is 25 years old and what we need is for them to join the rest of us in the 21st century.

‘They are behaving like 19th century railway barons... they are pushing them back into being Victorian children.’

The 5Rights report warns that by designing sites, apps and games with the intention of keeping children online, the tech sector is creating a public health issue. It outlined tactics used to keep children gripped, such as auto play content that means videos on platforms such as YouTube automatica­lly roll onto the next. A system of likes, shares and comments also means youngsters create a ‘metric of person value’, leading to a reliance on the rush from the ‘affirmatio­n’ of others.

And constant notificati­ons that ‘summon’ users leave children with a choice between being deluged with notificati­ons or living in fear of missing out.

5Rights warned children are particular­ly susceptibl­e to such tactics as they are programmed to ‘seek instant gratificat­ion’. Children interviewe­d described social media as a ‘contagious disease’, with many reporting anxiety, aggression and sleep deprivatio­n. It warned the Government must put children’s safety above lucrative deals with tech firms.

Baroness Kidron said: ‘No product should be routinely sold, delivered or shared with children unless it has had an impact assessment on the likely outcomes... and protection­s and mitigation­s put in place that are age appropriat­e... If you think about gambling and alcohol ... we have very strong protection­s. All the report says is: let’s have limits to [social media’s] availabili­ty when the end user is a child, let’s have warnings.’

Facebook and Instagram said the sites ‘were designed to bring people closer to friends and family’, adding: ‘Encouragin­g addictive behaviour does not factor into that process and we’re continuall­y working to make sure our platforms contribute­s to people’s lives in a positive way’. They added its rules state under-13s are not allowed to use the sites. Google was approached for comment.

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