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‘Tech firms are losing the public’: social media age bans near tipping point

‘Tech firms are losing the public’: social media age bans near tipping point

Arturo Béjar, a former employee turned whistleblower at Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta, has talked to parents around the world. He says they share the same perspective: they dread the day their children are old enough to go online.

, Elon Musk’s X, TikTok and Snapchat.

“I’ve spoken to parents from several countries,. I have yet to meet a parent of young kids who is not dreading when they’re old enough to go online. Or a young person who has not experienced something awful and preventable,” Béjar said.

Béjar, 55, was a senior engineer and consultant at Meta. He was a witness at recent trials in the US that ruled Meta was liable for deliberately designing addictive products. had misled consumers about the safety of its platforms. The trial in California in particular received coverage that will not have dissuaded politicians around the world from taking action.

“They [social media platforms] keep showing the world why we can’t trust them,” he said.

Meta said it disagreed with the verdicts. would appeal, and said the “profoundly complex” issue of teenagers’ mental health could not be reduced to a single cause, adding that it remained committed to building “safe, supportive environments for young people”.

People’s lack of trust is manifesting itself in action. Indonesia. Malaysia have introduced bans for under-16s on certain platforms, while Austria, France and Norway are also looking at age restrictions. Brazil has introduced a blanket mobile phone ban in schools,. children under the age of 16 are allowed to access social media only if it is linked to a parent’s account.

The UK plans to have a ban in place by spring 2027. while Canada is also going to bar under-16s from platforms unless those apps implement adequate safeguards. In the US, the home of the big powers in social media. of the first amendment, there is no prospect of a federal-level ban.

But the US aside, it seems the debate over whether social media causes harm,. what should be done about it, has swung decisively. The UK government had appointed an independent academic expert panel to look at the effect of social media on teenagers and. so far, its findings are “nuanced”. Nonetheless, Keir Starmer chose to take action.

A source at one tech company affected by the UK ban expressed frustration that some rivals had worked harder on safety than others, making what they viewed as rushed. disproportionately heavy regulation more likely.

“It’s hard to sell your safety measures to politicians when there is not enough consistency among your peers,” said the source, adding that the end result was a situation such as the ban in Australia, which they said did not encourage safer platform design. had high levels of circumvention. “You’re throwing the baby out with the bathwater.”

Meanwhile, a tech industry flush with cash continues to lobby against restrictions. In the European Union. big tech companies spent approximately €150m (£130m) on lobbying last year, an increase of a third in just two years, with social media high on the agenda – although AI was the biggest focus for tech meetings with the European Commission. Meta was the biggest spender at €10m, according to the campaign groups Corporate Europe Observatory and LobbyControl. One EU lawmaker said tech companies were “bombarding” Brussels with messages challenging social media age bans.

In the US, tech companies have been lobbying against the Kids Online Safety Act (Kosa), which is under consideration in the Senate. would require ⁠social media platforms to put in place measures to prevent certain harms to children, such as from compulsive use of their platforms.

Meta is the highest spending tech lobbyist in the US, according to the campaign group Issue One,. has one lobbyist for every six members of Congress. Between 2020 and 2024 big tech companies spent a combined $260m on federal lobbying. Commenting on its lobbying for a change to Kosa that would reportedly give tech companies immunity from certain lawsuits alleging child harm. Meta said it wanted “uniform national standards for online youth safety”.

Donald Trump’s White House has been consistently critical of tech regulation abroad. including the prospect of a “disproportionate” social media age ban in the UK. A ban seems extremely unlikely on big tech’s home turf, given the combination of political gridlock, the legal barrier of the first amendment. big tech’s status as part of the US economic establishment.

Darrell West, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a US thinktank, said state bans were “not likely on a widespread basis”. at a federal level the possibility was low “because too many legislators oppose government regulation of technology”.

Theo Bertram, the director of the Social Market Foundation thinktank. a former TikTok executive, as well as a former adviser to two former UK prime ministers, said tech companies should view the UK announcement as a global “tipping point”. “The history of legislation is you have one or two outliers. And then when you start to get countries that have a regulatory influence in the world. like the UK, joining countries like Australia – then it becomes a tipping point.”

The normal pattern with legislation, said Bertram, was that you have a cycle of calls for change, followed by careful consultation. then a law being implemented. And that’s it for five to 10 years. Populism had not only sped up the process, he said, but it had made the cycle seemingly endless.

“In an age of populism these companies are suffering criticism as well, not just mainstream politicians. Tech companies are losing public opinion and politicians are going to move on that.”

He added: “A fundamental worry that tech companies have is that tech regulation is becoming a topic that’s driven by public sentiment rather than expert. evidence-led policymaking.”

Summarising the work so far of its expert panel, the UK government said there were “known harms” from social media, particularly to “high-risk” individuals,. there were also benefits. Nonetheless, it is not the only country that has decided the risks outweigh the benefits for under-16s.

“Young people deserve online spaces that are designed for them,” said Béjar.

But patience is running out. Increasingly, there is one policy of choice for dealing with social media platforms and teenagers: closure.

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jun/28/tech-firms-are-losing-the-public-social-media-age-bans-near-tipping-point

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