Jeremy Hunt threatens social media with new child-protection laws
Social media
firms are being threatened with new laws if they don't do more to protect
children online.
In a letter
to companies including Facebook and Google, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt
accuses them of "turning a blind eye" to their impact on children.
He gives
them until the end of April to outline action on cutting underage use,
preventing cyber bullying, and promoting healthy screen time.
Google and
Facebook say they share Mr Hunt's commitment to safety.
The age
requirement to sign up to Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and Snapchat is 13. To
use WhatsApp or to have a YouTube account, you must also be at least 13.
In his
letter to the internet firms, Mr Hunt said: "I am concerned that your
companies seem content with a situation where thousands of users breach your
own terms and conditions on the minimum user age.
"I fear
that you are collectively turning a blind eye to a whole generation of children
being exposed to the harmful emotional side effects of social media
prematurely.
"This
is both morally wrong and deeply unfair to parents who are faced with the
invidious choice of allowing children to use platforms they are too young to
access or excluding them from social interaction that often the majority of
their peers are engaging in."
'Phone
jailer'
Conservative
MP Liz Truss said she had resorted to physically locking her 12-year-old
daughter's phone away.
"I have
a box which I lock up and put my daughter's mobile phone in and I'm known as
the phone jailer in our household," she told Pienaar's Politics on Radio 5
Live.
"It's
not just the internet, it's screen time over all. It's part of being a good
parent. I think social media companies can play a part and help parents in that
job."
Mr Hunt met
social media companies six months ago to discuss how to improve the mental
health of young people who use the technology.
He told the
Sunday Times, there had been "warm words" and "a few welcome
moves" since then, but the overall response had been "extremely
limited" - leading him to conclude that a voluntary, joint approach would
not be good enough.
"None
are easy issues to solve I realise, but an industry that boasts some of the
brightest minds and biggest budgets should have been able to rise to the
challenge," said Mr Hunt.
What can
parents do?
·
Understand
the risks that your children may be exposed to - including cyberbullying,
grooming, illegal or unsuitable content
·
Make
use of parental controls that give you the ability to filter the type of
content your children can see when they are online. With younger children, have
access to passwords to regularly check content
·
Show
them how to use privacy settings and the report and block functions on sites
and apps
·
Talk
regularly to them about what they do online, what posts they have made that
day, who they are friends with and how it is affecting their mood
·
Keep
an eye on how much time children spend online. Consider bans on devices at
mealtimes and take them away an hour before bedtime. Do not let children charge
devices in their rooms
The National
Bullying Helpline, a charity which deals with online bullying, said the
government needed to introduce legislation to govern the social media
companies.
"Asking
Facebook and other social media giants to regulate themselves is like asking
the press to regulate themselves. It won't happen," it added.
Mr Hunt said
the government would not rule out introducing new legislation to tackle the
issue when it publishes its response to the Internet Safety Strategy
consultation in May.
He has also
asked the chief medical officer to launch a review into the impact of
technology on the mental health of children and young people.
Katie
O'Donovan, public policy manager at Google UK, said the company had shown its
commitment to protecting children by developing its resources - such as an
online safety course which has been taught to 40,000 schoolchildren.
Facebook
said it welcomed Mr Hunt's "continued engagement on this important
issue" and shared his ambition to create a safe and supportive environment
for young people online.
"We
continue to invest heavily in developing tools for parents and age-appropriate
products to meet this challenge and we look forward to continuing to work with
our child safety partners and government to make progress in this area,"
said Karim Palant from Facebook .
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