France is set to be the first EU country to
follow Australia, which has a minimum age of 16, in outlawing the
technology for children in September. It plans to stop children under 15
using the services.
Brussels could now propose legislation for
an EU-wide ban sooner than that, after a panel of experts finishes
deliberating online child safety, von der Leyen said.
“I believe we must consider a social media delay,” the European Commission President said at a conference in Copenhagen.
“Depending on the results, we could come up with a legal proposal this summer,” she said on Tuesday.
She
praised Australia for its ban and added: “We are witnessing the
lightning speed at which technology is advancing – and how it penetrates
every corner of childhood and adolescence.
“Childhood and early
adolescence are formative years, and I believe we should give our
children more time to become resilient in this vulnerable phase.”
An
EU-wide ban would risk angering Donald Trump, who already views EU
regulation of US tech giants as disproportionate, protectionist and an
attack on free speech.
The President has threatened to hit the EU with tariffs while Washington is lobbying Brussels and London to water down its tech regulation.
Spain, Germany, Ireland, Denmark and Greece are considering their own versions of a ban pioneered by Australia last December....<<<Read More>>>...
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