Social media platforms must enforce rules
Social media services have their own Terms and Conditions that outline who can join the platform. This guidance will often include age requirements and content boundaries. Most social media platforms, for instance, require its users to be 13 or older.
John says the Online Safety Bill makes it so that social media services with any rules “about who can become a member or user, or what they are not allowed to do when using the service” must also clarify what they do to enforce those rules.
“Age assurance systems are going to become much more common,” he says. “The hope is that an element of interoperability will emerge, so people are not having to go through an age assurance process every time they log into or join a new service.”
Meet the experts
John Carr is Secretary of the UK Children’s Charities’ Coalition on Internet Safety and a member of the Executive Board of the UK Council for Child Internet Safety.
He is also a Senior Expert Adviser to the United Nations (International Telecommunication Union). In June 2012, John was appointed a Senior Visiting Fellow at the LSE.
Sacha is the co-founder and CEO of Yubo, a live social discovery app for Gen Z launched in 2015. As CEO, Sacha has played a pivotal role in expanding the Paris-based social app’s global footprint to more than 140 countries and driving Yubo’s online safety innovation to serve over 80 million young users.
Prior to launching Yubo, Sacha co-founded social apps Twelve and Saloon, which serve as the foundation for Yubo’s live social discovery model. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics from Université Paris Dauphine and studied entrepreneurship and computer science at CentraleSupélec.
Learn more about Yubo’s safety measures.
See how Yubo supports Internet Matters.
Andy Robertson has three children and has written about technology for families for 15 years. He is a freelance family technology expert for the BBC and wrote the Taming Gaming book for parents alongside the Family Gaming Database.