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EU Targets Social Media to Protect Children, von der Leyen

BRUSSELS, May 12 (Reuters) - The European Union is working on regulations to reign in on social media's business models ​to protect children and youth, European Commission's ‌President Ursula von der Leyen said on Tuesday.

The many damages caused to children and youth by exposure to social media ​are no accident "but the result of business ​models that treat our children's attention as a ⁠commodity," she said in a speech in Copenhagen.

She ​added the EU is specifically targeting TikTok, X and ​Meta Platforms Instagram and Facebook.

"We are taking action against TikTok and its addictive design, endless scrolling, autoplay and push notifications. The ​same applies to Meta, because we believe Instagram ​and Facebook are failing to enforce their own minimum age ‌of ⁠13," she said.

The Commission has also started proceedings against X for the use of its Grok artificial intelligence tool in creating sexual images of women and ​children.

Later this year, ​the Commission ⁠will target "addictive and harmful design practices" such as "attention capture, complex contracts, subscription traps", she ​said.

Von der Leyen also advocated for strict ​rules ⁠banning social media access for teenagers younger than a certain age.

"The question is not whether young people should ⁠have ​access to social media, the ​question is whether social media should have access to young people," she ​said.

Reporting by Inti Landauro, Editing by Charlotte Van Campenhout

Source: Reuters


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