The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

I disagree with Nick: Facebook can’t just pass the buck as suicide rates among young soar

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I’m

so thankful the internet wasn’t around when I was growing up and I feel sorry for youngsters nowadays who have to deal with it.

And most of them do need to deal with it.

The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children has found that half of 12-year-olds hold a social media account despite the minimum age for access to most sites being set at 13.

In response to these new figures, Damian Hinds, the UK Government’s Education Secretary, has warned the tech giants that children are children, that they have a moral duty of care to protect them online.

He argues that we need to make it more difficult for children to access harmful content, while improving parental controls.

Also last week, Facebook vice-president Sir Nick Clegg admitted that social media platforms needed to be more closely regulated by government­s.

I don’t buy that. These huge tech companies can’t just pass the buck.

They should be doing more and investing more to protect children online, not absolving themselves from responsibi­lity.

We saw a stark reminder of how vulnerable young people can be with the latest suicide figures.

They show a sharp rise in the number of

15 to 24-year-olds taking their own lives. Of course, social media cannot be held accountabl­e in every case, but the Scottish Government has warned that prolonged use of them could be fuelling a mental health crisis.

Mr Clegg, the former

Lib Dem leader and deputy prime minister, said there had been a shift in recent years from “tech utopia” to “tech phobia” and that we ran the risk of throwing the baby out with the bath water.

But the health and safety of our children must come before all else.

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 ??  ?? Living the dream? Gwyneth Paltrow in Maldives with Brad Falchuk on Instagram
Living the dream? Gwyneth Paltrow in Maldives with Brad Falchuk on Instagram

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