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3 weeks ago
https://reason.com/2026/02/11/spain-wants-to-ban-social-media-for-kids-it-wont-work
Spain plans to ban social media for children 15 and under, citing concerns about addiction and abuse. The article argues that such bans are ineffective, citing Australia's experience and potential privacy issues.
AI Extracted Information
Automatically extracted metadata and content analysis.
- AI Headline
- Spain Wants To Ban Social Media for Kids. It Won't Work.
- Simplified Title
- Spain Plans Social Media Ban for Kids
- AI Excerpt
- Spain plans to ban social media for children 15 and under, citing concerns about addiction and abuse. The article argues that such bans are ineffective, citing Australia's experience and potential privacy issues.
- Subject Tags
-
Social Media Child Safety Internet Regulation Spain Australia Mental Health Privacy
- Context Type
- Analysis
- AI Confidence Score
-
1.000
- Context Details
-
{ "tone": "opinionated", "perspective": "critical", "audience": "general", "credibility_indicators": [ "expert_quotes", "data_cited", "real-world examples" ] }
Source Information
Complete details about this source submission.
- Overall Status
-
Completed
- Submitted By
- Donato V. Pompo
- Submission Date
- February 11, 2026 at 10:41 PM
- Metadata
-
{ "source_type": "extension", "content_hash": "5b340536a4028fc696a8fd1c159d66b06aa20808ec9917cfd1751fae2e29bfb0", "submitted_via": "chrome_extension", "extension_version": "1.0.18", "original_url": "https:\/\/reason.com\/2026\/02\/11\/spain-wants-to-ban-social-media-for-kids-it-wont-work\/?utm_source=Reason+Magazine&utm_campaign=9a1c7317a2-reason_brand%7Cnew_at_reason%7C2026_02_11&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_31d7ef7f57-9a1c7317a2-589886052", "parsed_content": "Social Media\nSpain Wants To Ban Social Media for Kids. It Won't Work.\nAustralia\u2019s experience shows what happens when governments play online parent\nReem Ibrahim\n|\n2.11.2026 12:15 PM\nShare on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URLMedia Contact & Reprint Requests\n (Envato)\n\"Social media is a failed state,\" proclaimed Spanish Prime Minister Pedro S\u00e1nchez last week, before announcing plans to ban social media entirely for kids 15 years old and younger. \"Today, our children are exposed to a space where they were never meant to navigate alone: a space of addiction, abuse, pornography, manipulation, and violence,\" S\u00e1nchez said at the World Government Summit in Dubai. \"We will no longer accept that. We will protect them from the digital Wild West.\"\nThe ban still needs parliamentary approval, which could be discussed this week. It's unclear exactly what platforms would be covered by the ban, but in his speech, S\u00e1nchez was especially critical of X and TikTok.\u00a0\nIf approved, Spain would become the first European nation to ban social media for minors, but it is unlikely to be the last. Greece will soon unveil a ban similar to Spain's, reports Reuters. The idea also has traction with a sizable coalition of the European Union, including France and Denmark, and at the end of last year, the European Parliament passed a nonlegislative report urging the proposal of \"a harmonised EU digital minimum age of 16 for access to social media.\"\nDespite the current political consensus that social media harms children, there is no conclusive evidence that this is the case. An Oxford University study of nearly 12,000 children showed no correlation between screen time (including on social media) and mental well-being. Even where the participants had high rates of digital engagement, there was no evidence of impaired function in the brain development of children. Meanwhile, a study published in JAMA Pediatrics last month found that \"moderate social media use\" in fourth- through 12th-graders \"was associated with the best well-being outcomes, while both no use and highest use were associated with poorer well-being.\"\nNot only are bans on social media unlikely to improve teen mental health, but they could put more children in harm's way. In Australia, which implemented the world's first social media ban for minors last year, teens have been able to circumvent the new heavy-handed social media laws. As 14-year-old Sarai Ades told The Guardian earlier this month, she knew \"circumventing the ban was going to be possible, but it was so much easier than we could have expected\". \nAfter creating an account with a fake birthday, Ades has retained her social media access.\n\"Now that the platforms think I'm over 18 I have completely unfiltered access to all the content that might have been previously left out of my feed because of content restrictions,\" she told the paper. \"I definitely have more videos coming up on my feed around geopolitical instability and more violent coverage. It was really shocking at first and I wasn't at all prepared. Sometimes I set my own restrictions to avoid sensitive content because it gets a bit much.\"\nThe ban has also taken away a critical source of community for Australians in rural areas.\u00a0\nFor instance, 15-year-old Breanna Easton, who spends her summer holidays mustering cattle on the family's station in the sparsely populated outback, told the BBC that social media is how she interacts with her friends who live several hours away. \"Taking away our socials is just taking away how we talk to each other,\" she said.\nBeyond the negative impacts on teens' mental health, overarching bans raise serious privacy issues. In Australia, the government has said platforms cannot rely on users declaring their own age, or on parents vouching for their children. The legal responsibility for verification means that social media companies are effectively forced to require everyone to prove their identity with government IDs or video selfies. Measures like these have been susceptible to leaks of sensitive information. Last year, Discord revealed that hackers had stolen \"at least\" 70,000 images of government IDs that the site had used for age verification. In September, Politico reported that \"an age verification provider is potentially leaking information about people visiting pornographic websites.\"\nIt's not just Europe and Australia that are blaming the youth mental health crisis on social media and Big Tech. Several states in the Union have enacted bans or restrictions on social media sites. Last month, a landmark trial began in California to determine if Meta, Google, and ByteDance had deliberately designed their platforms to lead to addiction in children.\u00a0\nS\u00e1nchez says he wants to protect kids \"from the digital Wild West.\" If that's the case, a social media ban is a poor way to achieve this objective.", "ai_headline": "Spain Wants To Ban Social Media for Kids. It Won't Work.", "ai_simplified_title": "Spain Plans Social Media Ban for Kids", "ai_excerpt": "Spain plans to ban social media for children 15 and under, citing concerns about addiction and abuse. 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<html lang="en-US"><head><script async="" src="https://wave.outbrain.com/mtWavesBundler/handler/004f04e60775d61fb60b355a22904beb45" type="text/javascript"></script><script src="https://cdn.hadronid.net/hadron.js?url=https%3A%2F%2Freason.com%2F2026%2F02%2F11%2Fspain-wants-to-ban-social-media-for-kids-it-wont-work%2F%3Futm_source%3DReason%2BMagazine%26utm_campaign%3D9a1c7317a2-reason_brand%257Cnew_at_reason%257C2026_02_11%26utm_medium%3Demail%26utm_term%3D0_31d7ef7f57-9a1c7317a2-589886052&ref=&_it=freestar&partner_id=474&ha=_hadron"></script><script src="https://btloader.com/tag?o=5714937848528896&upapi=true"></script><meta http-equiv="origin-trial" content="A7vZI3v+Gz7JfuRolKNM4Aff6zaGuT7X0mf3wtoZTnKv6497cVMnhy03KDqX7kBz/q/iidW7srW31oQbBt4VhgoAAACUeyJvcmlnaW4iOiJodHRwczovL3d3dy5nb29nbGUuY29tOjQ0MyIsImZlYXR1cmUiOiJEaXNhYmxlVGhpcmRQYXJ0eVN0b3JhZ2VQYXJ0aXRpb25pbmczIiwiZXhwaXJ5IjoxNzU3OTgwODAwLCJpc1N1YmRvbWFpbiI6dHJ1ZSwiaXNUaGlyZFBhcnR5Ijp0cnVlfQ=="> <link rel="precon...
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Social Media Spain Wants To Ban Social Media for Kids. It Won't Work. Australiaβs experience shows what happens when governments play online parent Reem Ibrahim | 2.11.2026 12:15 PM Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URLMedia Contact & Reprint Requests (Envato) "Social media is a failed state," proclaimed Spanish Prime Minister Pedro SΓ‘nchez last week, before announcing plans to ban social media entirely for kids 15 years old and younger. "Today, our children are exposed to a space where they were never meant to navigate alone: a space of addiction, abuse, pornography, manipulation, and violence," SΓ‘nchez said at the World Government Summit in Dubai. "We will no longer accept that. We will protect them from the digital Wild West." The ban still needs parliamentary approval, which could be discussed this week. It's unclear exactly what platforms would be covered by the ban, but in his speech, SΓ‘nchez was especially critical of X and...
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Claims from this Source (21)
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Simplified: Pedro SΓ‘nchez announced plans to ban social media for kids 15 years old and younger
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Simplified: SΓ‘nchez said children are exposed to addiction abuse pornography manipulation and violence on social media
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Simplified: The ban needs parliamentary approval
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Simplified: Greece will soon unveil a ban similar to Spain's
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Simplified: The idea of banning social media has traction with a sizable coalition of the European Union including France and Denmark
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Simplified: European Parliament passed a report urging a harmonised EU digital minimum age of 16 for access to social media
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Simplified: There is no conclusive evidence that social media harms children despite current political consensus
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Simplified: Even where participants had high rates of digital engagement there was no evidence of impaired function in brain development of children
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Statistical , Health π a11666f0-98d2-425a-99fd-a9f52fddb58fSimplified: Study in JAMA Pediatrics found moderate social media use in fourth- through 12th-graders was associated with the best well-being outcomes while no use...
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Simplified: Bans on social media could put more children in harm's way
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Simplified: Teens have been able to circumvent new heavy-handed social media laws in Australia
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Simplified: After creating an account with a fake birthday Ades has retained her social media access
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Simplified: The ban has taken away a critical source of community for Australians in rural areas
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Simplified: Social media is how Breanna Easton interacts with her friends who live several hours away
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Simplified: Overarching bans raise serious privacy issues
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Simplified: Social media companies are effectively forced to require everyone to prove their identity with government IDs or video selfies
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Simplified: Measures like these have been susceptible to leaks of sensitive information
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Simplified: Hackers had stolen at least 70000 images of government IDs that Discord had used for age verification
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Simplified: An age verification provider is potentially leaking information about people visiting pornographic websites
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Simplified: Several states in the Union have enacted bans or restrictions on social media sites
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Social Media π a1164100-66c7-420a-882c-d9e8aca900f1Simplified: Plaintiffs allege Meta TikTok Snap YouTube caused personal injury through addictive products