HomeCompany NewsCanada introduces legislation to ban social media for children under 16

Canada introduces legislation to ban social media for children under 16

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By Maria Cheng

OTTAWA, ‌June 10 (Reuters) - The Canadian government introduced a ​new digital safety bill on Wednesday that would ban social media for ⁠children under 16 with exemptions for platforms that meet certain safety standards, months after Australia enacted the world's first ​social media ban for young people.

The bill also aims to make AI ‌chatbots safer by setting up a digital regulator to establish safety standards, a government official said. 

Its introduction in Parliament comes weeks ⁠after families affected by one of the ⁠country's worst mass shootings sued OpenAI, alleging that the company knew the alleged killer was planning the attack on ChatGPT but did not warn police.

In December, Australia became the world’s ‌first country to ban social media for children under ⁠16. A month after its law was ‌introduced, social media companies collectively deactivated ​the accounts of nearly 5 million teenagers.

France, Denmark and Poland are also considering tightening rules around social media use ‌for children, while Greece in April announced ​it would ban access ⁠to those under the age of 15 from January ‌2027.

Government officials in a ⁠technical briefing said it could take a year for the bill to pass and 18 months to set up the digital ​regulator once it ‌does.

Prime Minister Mark Carney has a slim majority in Parliament, which ⁠is due to break ​for summer recess soon.

(Reporting by Maria Cheng; Editing by ​Caroline Stauffer and Mark Porter)

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