German Chancellor Merz Supports Restrictions on Children's Social Media Access

German Chancellor Merz Supports Restrictions on Children's Social Media Access

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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz has endorsed growing calls in the country to restrict children's access to social media platforms.

Merz stated he has become increasingly convinced of the need for mandatory restrictions due to evidence of harms from the deliberate spread of fake news and other online manipulations. In a speech ahead of his conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) party's annual meeting, he questioned: "Do we want to allow fake news, artificially produced fake videos, and distortions to spread through social media?"

Citing that 14-year-olds spend an average of five and a half hours online daily, Merz added: "Do we want to allow our society to be weakened through this, both from inside and outside, and our youth and children to be endangered?"

The CDU party meeting on Friday is set to discuss a proposal banning children under 16 from platforms like TikTok and Instagram. Similar demands have come from Merz's center-left Social Democratic coalition partners.

A number of European countries, including Spain, Greece, France and Britain, are pursuing comparable bans or restrictions, following Australia's lead as the first nation to mandate platforms block children's access last year.

Merz acknowledged: "Two years ago, I probably would have said something else, but I completely underestimated the importance of algorithms, artificial intelligence, and targeted, controlled influence -- just as probably all of us did."

He dismissed arguments for gradually introducing youth to social media, equating it to teaching six-year-olds to drink alcohol.

Merz's backing raises the prospect of federal restrictions, though under Germany's federal system, media regulation is a state responsibility requiring interstate agreement for nationwide rules.

Discussions on social media's negative effects on children have intensified, with the government appointing a special commission last year to assess youth protections from online harms. The commission is due to report later this year.

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InternationalGermanyFriedrich MerzSocial MediaChildrenCDU

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