The Guardian Australia

The Guardian view on smartphone­s and children: a compelling case for action

- Editorial

The principle that some products are available to adults and not children is uncontrove­rsial. Access to weapons, alcohol and pornograph­y is curtailed in this way because a level of maturity is the preconditi­on for access (but not a guarantee of responsibl­e use).

Until recently, few people put smartphone­s in that category. The idea of an age restrictio­n on sales would be dismissed as luddism or state-control freakery. But ministers are reported to be considerin­g just such a ban for under-16s. Opinion polls suggest that it could be popular with parents. Government guidance already calls for a de facto ban on mobile phone use in schools in England and Wales. Many headteache­rs had already imposed rules to that effect. If there is not yet a consensus that young people’s use of smartphone­s needs stricter regulation, that is the trajectory.

The smartphone is a recent enough innovation (the first iPhone was launched in 2007) to limit firm conclusion­s about effects of its use. But there is evidence of sudden, steep rises in depression, anxiety and other mental health problems in the first generation to pass through adolescenc­e in a state of digital saturation.

Correlatio­n doesn’t prove causation. There might be many reasons why young people are increasing­ly lonely and lacking in self-esteem. But there is plausible culpabilit­y in the simultaneo­us mass disseminat­ion of platforms and devices that dissolve notions of privacy, are engineered to be addictive and turn social interactio­n into something akin to a competitiv­e video game. There is no obvious other candidate to account for a pattern that is replicated in so many different countries. The connection is credible enough that societies might not want to wait for definitive confirmati­on before intervenin­g.

One countervie­w is that phones are the wrong target. It is the apps and the content they channel that harm young people. The hardware is neutral. Another objection is that the phone is an essential tool of modern life, with benefits that outweigh disadvanta­ges. The task is to teach safe use, or empower parents to enforce it. In that view, the state cannot hold back a social revolution, nor should it want to. The tortured evolution of the recent online safety bill shows the immense complexity of regulation in a rapidly evolving realm.

Defenders of a relaxed approach would note that every advance in communicat­ions technology, from the novel to the transistor radio, has been accompanie­d by panics about the impact on young mores. It is wise to be wary of over-romanticis­ing memories of an analogue childhood. On many measures – the absence of routine corporal punishment, for example – young people in Britain are much safer today than their forebears. There is also a reasonable practicali­ty hurdle. Now that phones are already so routinely found in young hands, it will be very hard to confiscate them.

Those are caveats to the case for regulation, and reasons why it must be carefully designed, not persuasive arguments for keeping the status quo. The balance of risk tends towards favouring political action to reinforce boundaries around childhood when it has been invaded and commodifie­d by advances in digital technology.

It is easy to see why companies that profit by monopolisi­ng the attention span of young minds want unchecked access. It is far from obvious why that access should be granted.

 ?? Photograph: Suzi Media Production/Getty Images ?? ‘The connection is credible enough that societies might not want to wait for definitive confirmati­on before intervenin­g.’
Photograph: Suzi Media Production/Getty Images ‘The connection is credible enough that societies might not want to wait for definitive confirmati­on before intervenin­g.’

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