The first five countries to take the plunge – France, Denmark, Greece, Italy and Spain – will be able to use this European prototype. Each Member State can adjust it according to its own rules.
Five European countries, including France, will test an application to check the age of online users and prevent children from accessing dangerous content, the European Commission announced on Monday. “This device will allow users to easily prove that they are over 18 years old, which will protect children from inappropriate content”explained Henna Virkkunen, European commissioner responsible for technological issues. Very concretely, it is a European prototype that each Member State can adjust according to its own rules: for example depending on a ban is in force on the Internet for children aged 12, 13 or 15, etc.
The first five countries to take the plunge are France, Denmark, Greece, Italy and Spain. This proposal was particularly advanced by France, the minister in charge of digital, Clara Chappaz, defending an age verification “At European level” To access social networks. In early June, French President Emmanuel Macron is committed to prohibiting social networks for children under 15 in France Si, “In a few months”it was not done at European level.
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“Platforms have no excuse”
The European Union has one of the most strict legislative arsenal in the world to supervise digital giants. But calls to go further multiply among the twenty-seven, while studies demonstrate the negative effects of social networks on the mental and physical health of young people. On Monday, the European Commission also published recommendations for social networks for young people, to allow for example minors to block users more easily.
These measures also include the abolition of potentially addictive features such as “Cars”which indicate that a message has been read and can push an answer frantically. “It is essential to ensure that our children and young people are safe online”and Disclalie’s place went Henna equip rocket. “Platforms have no excuse for pursuing practices that endanger children”she said.
Brussels is currently conducting surveys on Facebook and Instagram social networks of the American group Meta, as well as on Tiktok, as part of its new Digital Services Regulations (DSA). These platforms are suspected of not sufficiently protecting children from harmful content. At the end of May, the Commission also opened an investigation into four pornographic sites (pornhub, stripchat, xnxx, and xvideos) suspected of not preventing children’s access to adult content.