Digital Times Nigeria
  • Home
  • Telecoms
    • Broadband
  • Business
    • Banking
    • Finance
  • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Big Story
  • TechExtra
    • Fintech
    • Innovation
  • Interview
  • Media
    • Social
    • Broadcasting
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • FairMoney Taps Shobo, Aderoju For Top Board Roles Amid Expansion Drive
  • Nigerian Music Powers Spotify’s Growth As Artists Earn Over ₦60bn In 2025
  • Tinubu Backs Nigerian Media Against Big Tech, Considers Tariff Relief
  • Teachers At The Core Of Nigeria’s Digital Future, Says NITDA DG
  • Fidelity Bank’s Onyeali-Ikpe, Dabiri-Erewa, Rewane Urge Greater Diaspora Role In Nigeria’s Economy
  • NITDA Targets Cyber Skills Gap With Women-Focused Security Training Initiative
  • Gidado, Polaris Bank Chair Urges Integrity, Lifelong Learning As 2,037 Bankers Inducted At CIBN ceremony
  • NDPC Warns Content Creators Against Filming Nigerians Without Consent
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Digital Times NigeriaDigital Times Nigeria
  • Home
  • Telecoms
    • Broadband
  • Business
    • Banking
    • Finance
  • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Big Story
  • TechExtra
    • Fintech
    • Innovation
  • Interview
  • Media
    • Social
    • Broadcasting
Digital Times Nigeria
Home » French Commission Recommends Banning Social Media For Children Under 15
SOCIAL

French Commission Recommends Banning Social Media For Children Under 15

DigitalTimesNGBy DigitalTimesNG11 September 2025No Comments2 Mins Read18 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
Social media
Image of children using social media platforms....Credit: Meta AI
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email WhatsApp

A French parliamentary commission probing the psychological effects of TikTok recommends banning social media for children under 15 and adopting a “digital curfew” for 15- to 18-year-olds, according to a report released Thursday.

Such a ban would “send a signal to both children and parents that before the age of 15,” social media “is not harmless,” Laure Miller, a lawmaker and rapporteur for the parliamentary commission, told AFP.

The commission was launched in March, after seven families sued TikTok in late 2024 for allegedly exposing their children to content that could push them to suicide.

It heard from families whose children had killed themselves, social media executives, and influencers on TikTok — owned by China-based ByteDance and used by millions of young people in France — before issuing its recommendations.

Geraldine, 52, lost her daughter Penelope to suicide at the age of 18. After her death, she discovered videos of self-harm that her daughter had posted and viewed on TikTok.

“It’s difficult for us as parents to moderate all this,” she told AFP, asking that her last name be withheld.

TikTok has regularly said that ensuring the safety of young people is “its top priority”.

The company says it removes more than 95 percent of inappropriate content within 24 hours, and 90 percent before it has been watched even once.

In addition to the ban for children under 15, the commission recommends a digital curfew for 15- to 18-year-olds to make social media inaccessible between 10:00 pm and 8:00 am.

It recommends going as far as banning social media for everyone under 18 if “social networks do not satisfactorily comply with their legal obligations”, particularly under the EU’s Digital Services Act, within three years.

READ ALSO  Book Review: Cyber Politics – Social Media, Social Demography and Voting Behaviour in Nigeria

It also recommends a broad information campaign on social media risks, followed by the creation of a “digital negligence offense” for “irresponsible parents”.

According to Miller, recent European Commission guidelines have “opened the door to national regulation”, the key to which is “the implementation of an age verification system at registration”.

However, such measures are hampered by the reluctance of platforms, technical limitations, and concerns about infringing on individual freedoms.

Several EU countries, including France, Spain, and Greece, have called on Brussels to further regulate children’s use of online platforms, amid concerns about their addictive nature and the dangers associated with cyberbullying and the proliferation of hate speech.

News Source: BSS/AFP  

#Children #French Commission #Social Media
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleTD Africa, IBM Spotlight Digital Innovation At GITEX Nigeria 2025
Next Article Nigeria Pulls In ₦600bn VAT From Facebook, Amazon, Netflix
DigitalTimesNG
  • X (Twitter)

Comments are closed.

Categories
About
About

Digital Times Nigeria (www.digitaltimesng.com) is an online technology publication of Digital Times Media Services.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Latest Posts

FairMoney Taps Shobo, Aderoju For Top Board Roles Amid Expansion Drive

17 March 2026

Nigerian Music Powers Spotify’s Growth As Artists Earn Over ₦60bn In 2025

17 March 2026

Tinubu Backs Nigerian Media Against Big Tech, Considers Tariff Relief

17 March 2026
Popular Posts

Building Explainable AI (XAI) Dashboards For Non-Technical Stakeholders

2 May 2022

Building Ethical AI Starts With People: How Gabriel Ayodele Is Engineering Trust Through Mentorship

8 January 2024

Gabriel Tosin Ayodele: Leading AI-Powered Innovation In Web3

8 November 2022
© 2026 Digital Times NG.
  • Advert Rate
  • Terms of Use
  • Advertisement
  • Private Policy
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.