French deputies applaud in the National Assembly after approving a ban on social media for under-15s and phones in schools.
French deputies applaud in the National Assembly after approving a ban on social media for under-15s and phones in schools.
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French National Assembly adopts bill banning social media for under-15s and mobile phones in high schools

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The French National Assembly approved on January 26, 2026, a government-backed bill banning social media access for minors under 15 and prohibiting mobile phone use in high schools. Introduced by Renaissance deputy Laure Miller and accelerated by President Emmanuel Macron, the streamlined measure—focusing on parental controls for the riskiest platforms—aims to protect youth mental and physical health amid years of debate.

The bill, presented by deputy Laure Miller from Marne, passed 130 votes to 21 after significant revisions. Originally seven articles including bans, curfews, and offenses, it was reduced to two essentials following Conseil d'État consultation on November 24, 2025: prohibiting under-15 access to the most dangerous social media platforms and banning mobiles in high schools, with strengthened parental controls.

A source close to the matter noted it 'arriv[ed] exactly where deputy Miller wished,' balancing child protection with legal feasibility and EU constraints. It competes with other initiatives under Macron's tight timeline.

Miller, rapporteur on TikTok's effects, declared: 'With this law, we will set a clear limit in society. We say one simple thing: social media is anything but harmless. These social networks promised to connect, but they fragmented. They promised to inform, but they saturated. They promised to entertain, but they imprisoned.' Junior Minister for Digital Affairs Anne Le Hénanff added: 'Before 15, it's the age of carefreeness, creativity, learning, and self-building. Our children's brains are not for sale, nor should they be dominated.'

Platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram are already bolstering parental controls in anticipation. Public polls, such as one from Le Figaro, highlight controversies over youth digital engagement. This marks a major regulatory step in France on social media's impact on minors.

人々が言っていること

Reactions on X to the French National Assembly's approval of the bill banning social media for under-15s and mobile phones in high schools are polarized. Supporters including government ministers praise it as a vital protection for youth health and a European first. Critics from right-wing and libertarian users decry it as a pretext for mass identity verification, surveillance, and censorship, arguing it's ineffective and prefers parental controls and education instead. High-engagement posts highlight cross-party vote support but question enforcement feasibility.

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Photorealistic image of PM Keir Starmer announcing social media ban for under-16s in UK Parliament, with frustrated teens and blocked app icons.
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英国、2027年までに16歳未満の主要SNS利用禁止へ

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キア・スターマー首相は2026年6月15日(月)、英国政府が16歳未満の子供による主要ソーシャルメディアプラットフォームの利用を制限する法案を推進する方針を明らかにした。政府は今年12月下旬までに法案を可決させ、2027年中の施行を目指す。

英国政府は6月15日、16歳未満の子供に対するソーシャルメディアの利用を禁止する計画を発表した。この規則は2027年春に施行される見通しである。提案では、各プラットフォームに対し、厳格な年齢確認の実施と未成年者に対する特定の機能制限が義務付けられる。

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カナダは16歳未満のSNSアカウント保持を禁止する法案を提出した。「安全なソーシャルメディア法」は、プラットフォームやAIチャットボットに対する新たな規制も定めている。

The Swedish government has received approval from the EU Commission for a fast-track on a new law forcing social media platforms to remove gang recruitment material within one hour. Justice Minister Gunnar Strömmer described it as the first such legislation in any EU member state. The law targets the recruitment of children into gangs via platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and Snapchat.

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中国の国家インターネット情報弁公室は先週、デマの拡散や、公衆の怒りや差別を煽る投稿を防止するため、11のオンライン活動を禁止する新しい規則を打ち出した。

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