Rushed social media ban for under-16s in UK could โunravelโ, charity warns
Molly Rose Foundation says government should instead set strict safety standards for apps A rushed under-16s social media ban in the UK could unravel and families will be left to count the cost, a leading child safety charity has warned. The Molly Rose Foundation (MRF) said an
Molly Rose Foundation says government should instead set strict safety standards for apps
A rushed under-16s social media ban in the UK could unravel and families will be left to count the cost, a leading child safety charity has warned.
The Molly Rose Foundation (MRF) said an age limit on the use of tech platforms could unravel, after it was reported that the prime minister, Keir Starmer , would announce a ban on under-16s accessing โharmfulโ social media apps.
It is not known which apps would fit into that category, but a blanket ban in Australia covers Facebook, Instagram, X, TikTok and Snapchat among others.
MRF, founded by the family of Molly Russell, a British teenager who took her own life after viewing harmful online content on Instagram and Pinterest, said a ban would fail to keep children safer because they would circumvent age checks and could move to less regulated areas such as gaming.
Andy Burrows, the MRF chief executive, said a โrushedโ ban would โquickly unravelโ and was not supported by the evidence.
โParents have been clear they want decisive action that will actually work,โ he said. โIf Keir Starmer prioritises short-term announcements over what the evidence and experts say is needed, children and parents will be left to count the cost and child protection will take a step back.โ
The Times reported on Sunday that the government was planning to announce a ban before the Makerfield byelection on 18 June. The mayor of Manchester, Andy Burnham , who is contesting the seat for Labour, has said he will challenge Starmer for the party leadership if he wins.

