Edu-committee wants social media ban to save mental health
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UK’s Education Committee: Social media ban a must to save children’s mental health
Committee says tech companies are failing children and cannot be trusted to self-regulate
Connor Jones
Connor<br>Jones
Cybersecurity reporter
Published<br>thu 21 May 2026 // 09:30 UTC
5225961<br>UK Parliament’s Education Committee is advocating for a statutory ban on social media for under-16s, saying “addictive” platforms are harming their development, behavior, and mental health, sometimes leading to “truly horrific consequences.”<br>Committee chair Helen Hayes, MP for Dulwich and West Norwood, said: “From bullying and misogyny to abuse and sexual exploitation, children and young people growing up today face a deluge of serious harms whenever they log on to social media.
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“The same platforms that connect them to their friends, or introduce them to new hobbies, are putting their mental health and wellbeing at risk.”
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As well as a ban, the committee also wants to see the government take action on the “addictive design elements” social media platforms incorporate into their products for under-18s, such as “infinite scrolling” content feeds, algorithmic promotion of posts, and auto-playing videos.<br>Committee members say these features specifically lead to increased time spent in front of screens, sleep disruption, reduced attention, and behavior problems.<br>Hayes said social media platforms are failing to take responsibility for the developmental issues to which their platforms’ designs are contributing.<br>“In the most extreme cases, inaction can have truly horrific consequences,” she said. “Yet social media companies have not taken full responsibility for the behaviour on their platforms.<br>“Based on the evidence my committee has received, I simply do not believe that companies who profit from interactions with children can be relied upon to self-regulate.<br>“In schools, mobile phone use can distract children, increase the risk of behavioural problems, and ultimately undermine their education.”
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The Education Committee said that although it is officially calling for a ban, this should only be a “starting point,” a precursor to a far more robust regulatory framework that applies to gaming, hybrid platforms, messaging services, and AI platforms, in addition to social media.<br>It communicated its position on child social media use to the UK government on Thursday in an official response to the consultation on the matter, shared with The Register ahead of publication.
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The consultation opened in March and sought views from industry experts and the wider public on whether an under-16 social media ban in the UK, similar to the one introduced by Australia last year, would be sufficiently valuable.<br>It continues to run alongside a series of six-week trials involving 300 families, looking at how different social media restrictions affect teens’ daily lives.<br>In its response to the consultation, the Education Committee’s report says the issues affecting the country’s children are “severe and systemic,” deliberately implemented by the tech companies behind the platforms to maximise engagement, despite being linked to myriad harms.<br>It further argued the government should tackle the matter urgently, treating it in the same way it would any other pressing public health issue.<br>Regulations should ensure platforms are built with a safety-by-design philosophy, and provide tech companies with clear instructions on how to prioritize safety in their products – all backed by punishments for non-compliance, MPs said.<br>“Ministers must take action before it is too late,” Hayes added. “In our submission to the government’s consultation, the committee calls on the government to restrict addictive features, impose strict duties on social media companies, and treat child safety as a public health issue.<br>“Anything less leaves children, parents, and schools forced to compensate for the unsafe digital worlds enabled by social media firms.”<br>Ban fever
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Various countries around the world have announced their intention to ban social media use for children, although only Australia and Greece have formally approved legislation.<br>Countries including France and India are in the advanced stages of imposing similar statutory measures, and even more across the world have committed to the same, although they differ widely in their legislative progress.<br>Brazil, for example, has introduced laws that require under-16s to link their social media accounts to a legal guardian. The same efforts have limited key risk factors, such as infinite scrolling,...