this post was submitted on 07 Nov 2025
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COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — Denmark’s government on Friday announced a political agreement to ban access to social media for anyone aged under 15.

The move, led by the Ministry of Digitalization, would set the age limit for access to social media but give some parents — after a specific assessment — the right to give consent to let their children access social media from age 13.

Such a measure would be among the most sweeping steps yet by a European government to address concerns about the use of social media among teens and younger children.

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[–] mjr 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Yes, this does smell a bit like fixing the wrong problem mixed with a possible trojan horse for compulsory ID-verification (and the dodgy businesses often claiming to provide it). Surely if social media is too corrosive for young people, there are a lot of adults who also won't be able to cope, so the corrosive bits need to be tackled?

[–] shads@lemy.lol 2 points 2 days ago

Over here in Australia the government is being told that the equivalent that we are having foisted on us lacks key supporting measures (like an equivalent of GDPR, actual hard and fast laws to penalise the misuse or failure to adequately secure citizens data, etc).

In spite of this and genuine commentary from children's advocacy groups saying the legislation is not fit for purpose it is being steamrolled through because "won't somebody think of the children".

It does make me wonder how many children are going to be cut off from their support networks and escape routes that this might harm, potentially fatally. How much blood of Australia's youth is our government willing to have on its hands so that our intelligence community (and we are part of five eyes so it doesn't stay on our shores) can have a shiny new toy?