LONDON (REUTERS)
Britain's media and privacy regulators on Thursday demanded that major social media platforms do more to keep children off their services, warning that companies were failing to enforce their own minimum age rules.
Britain has been weighing tougher curbs on children's access to social media, with the government considering barring under 16s from such platforms - mirroring a move by Australia.
Ofcom and the Information Commissioner's Office said they had grown increasingly concerned about algorithmic feeds that expose children to harmful or addictive content.
In the latest implementation phase of Britain's Online Safety Act, Ofcom told Facebook and Instagram - both owned by Meta - as well as Roblox, Snapchat, ByteDance's TikTok and Alphabet's YouTube to show by April 30 how they would tighten age checks, restrict strangers from contacting children, make feeds safer and stop testing new products on minors.
The ICO separately issued an open letter to the same platforms, calling on them to adopt "modern, viable" age-assurance tools to stop those under 13 accessing services not designed for them.
A Meta spokesperson said the company already uses AI-based age detection and age-estimation tools and places teens in accounts with built-in protections.
The spokesperson added that age should be verified "centrally at the app store level" so families do not have to provide personal information multiple times.
A YouTube spokesperson said the platform offers age-appropriate experiences and was "surprised to see Ofcom move away from a risk-based approach," urging the regulator to focus on "high-risk services" that were failing to comply with the law.
Roblox, Snapchat and TikTok did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Ofcom can fine companies up to 10% of their qualifying global revenue, while the ICO can issue fines of up to 4% of a company's global annual turnover.
The privacy watchdog last month fined Reddit nearly 14.5 million pounds for failing to introduce meaningful age checks and for processing children's data unlawfully.