UK summons Meta, TikTok, YouTube over child safety rules
The UK Prime Minister has summoned senior leaders from Meta, Snap, Google (YouTube), TikTok, and X to Downing Street to discuss children's online safety. This meeting is part of a government consultation, "Growing Up in the Online World," aimed at creating new legislation to protect children from social media harms, with proposals including minimum age requirements and limits on addictive design features. The government has stated its intention to act swiftly on legislative powers once the consultation concludes.
Key Takeaways
- The meeting included senior leaders from Meta, Snap, Google (YouTube), TikTok and X.
- The government says it has already taken powers to act quickly once its consultation ends.
- The consultation, “Growing Up in the Online World,” has received more than 45,000 responses.
- Around 6,000 young people and more than 80 organisations have մասնակցated in the process.
- Proposals under review include a minimum age for social media, limits on addictive design features and safeguards for AI chatbots.
Why It Matters
The immediate impact is regulatory pressure: the UK government is signaling that child-safety rules for social platforms may move within months, not years, once the consultation closes. For streaming and social video services, the same meeting bundles together the biggest distribution platforms—Meta, YouTube, TikTok, Snap and X—around requirements tied to autoplay, screen-time controls, curfews and AI chatbot safeguards. The key signal to watch is the consultation deadline on 26 May, along with any draft legislation that follows and whether it includes a minimum social-media age or restrictions on addictive design features.
Read full article at gov.uk