PolicyRegulatory ActionMay 30, 2026
UN says child social media bans won't solve platform safety
The United Nations human rights office issued a warning that banning social media for children is insufficient, emphasizing the need for platforms to implement safety measures. They concurrently introduced a 10-point framework aimed at enhancing platform safety.
Key Takeaways
- The UN human rights office said bans on children’s social media use are insufficient on their own.
- The office released a 10-point framework for improving platform safety.
- The guidance centers on making social media platforms safer rather than only restricting access.
Why It Matters
The immediate implication is straightforward: child-access bans are not being treated by the UN as a substitute for platform-level safeguards. For streaming and social video services, the policy signal points toward design and safety requirements inside the product, not just age gates at signup. The article’s key detail to watch is the UN’s 10-point framework, which is the concrete standard now attached to this warning and may shape how platforms are evaluated next.
Read full article at punchng.com
