The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Social media giants could face new laws to protect children

Living statues mark 454th birthday of William Shakespear­e Health secretary accuses firms of turning blind eye

- BY SHAUN CONNOLLY

New laws to crack down on social media giants that allow flagrant breaches of age limits are being considered by ministers.

In a strongly-worded letter to platforms like Facebook and Google, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt has accused companies of “turning a blind eye” to a generation of children who are being “exposed to harmful emotional side effects” of social media use.

The firms have been given just over a week to set out what steps they have taken to cut underage use, prevent cyber bullying and encourage healthy screen time, and what more they intend to do.

The health secretary warned that the failure of platforms to prevent young children using social media was “unacceptab­le and irresponsi­ble”.

He wrote: “In particular, progress on age verificati­on is not good enough. I am concerned that your companies seem content with a situation where thousands of users breach your own A young girl looks at British performer The Goldman during the National Living Statue Competitio­n for the 454th birthday celebratio­n of Shakespear­e in the Bancroft Gardens in Stratford-upon-Avon, birthplace of the Bard terms and conditions on the minimum user age.

“I fear that you are collective­ly turning a blind eye to a whole generation of children being exposed to the harmful emotional side effects of social media prematurel­y.

“This is both morally wrong and deeply unfair to parents who are faced with the invidious choice of allowing children to use platforms they are too young to access, or excluding them from social interactio­n that often the majority of their peers are engaging in.

“It is unacceptab­le and irresponsi­ble for you to put parents in this position.”

The health secretary questioned whether social media giants had “sufficient will” to introduce solutions.

Mr Hunt stressed that the government does not rule out bringing in new legislatio­n to deal with the situation when it considers options in May.

The interventi­on comes six months after the health secretary set in train a working group on children and young people’s mental health and social media that involved Facebook, Snapchat, Google and others.

In December, the health secretary publicly attacked Facebook for releasing a version aimed at children, telling the company to “stay away from my kids”.

An evidence-based review by the Chief Medical Officer on the impact of technology on the mental health of children and young people has also been launched by Mr Hunt.

“This is both morally wrong and deeply unfair to parents”

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Jeremy Hunt

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