UK PM Starmer tells social media firms they must act on online safety


British Prime Minister Keir Starmer hosts social media industry leaders to discuss child safety online on April 16, 2026 in London, England. Leon Neal/Pool via REUTERS

LONDON, April 15 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Keir Starmer told social media companies on ⁠Thursday to take responsibility for children's safety on their platforms and meet ‌parents' demands for credible protection rather than "tweaks around the edges".

He said he wanted to hear what actions the platforms were going to take because "right now, social media is putting our children at risk" at the start ​of a meeting with executives from Meta, Snap, Google, ⁠TikTok and X.

Starmer's government has ramped ⁠up scrutiny of social media companies, saying children were being exposed to harm online ⁠without ‌clear accountability, and has pledged to act to limit the impact of such apps on sleep, family life and schoolwork.

He said the companies had introduced some ⁠protections - such as disabling autoplay on YouTube for children and ​giving parents greater control ‌over screen time, including curfews - but he wanted them to go further.

"Companies have ⁠to grip this ​and work with us to do better by British children and to demonstrate credibly and quickly how these products can be made appropriate for children," Starmer said.

He highlighted growing concerns about escalating ⁠bullying and social pressures, as well as the lack ​of clear boundaries between school and home life.

"It's clear to me that parents aren't asking us for tweaks at the edges," he told the executives, who were not named by ⁠the government.

"They're asking us whether a system that clearly isn't working for children should be allowed to continue at all."

Britain is consulting until next month on whether to restrict children's access to social media, including a possible ban for under-16s, as well as curfews, ​app time limits and curbs on what it described as ⁠addictive design features.

Australia last year became the first country to ban social media for children ​under 16, with European countries considering similar measures.

French President ‌Emmanuel Macron is due to push for a ​coordinated approach among European Union leaders on banning social media for minors.

(Reporting by Sam Tabahriti and Muvija M, Editing by Paul Sandle and Alex Richardson)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Stellantis, Microsoft sign five-year partnership for AI push
India's Wipro unveils record buyback after slight quarterly revenue miss
Strong ASML, TSMC forecasts signal AI spending boom is intact
Samsung asks court to block illegal strike activities by unions
Google should allow third-party search engines access to data, EU says
German banks examine risks of Anthropic's Mythos with authorities
Chatbots at the ballot box: AI skirts Brazil election rules
Nvidia’s Huang says Mythos shows need for US-China AI dialogue
MyTNB app, website to undergo upgrade from April 17; services to be limited
Zara owner Inditex reports unauthorised access to transaction databases

Others Also Read