Tag Archives: parental controls

UK Government Plans Social Media Ban for Under 16s: A Line in the Sand or a Digital Wake Up Call?

The UK Government has announced what could become one of the most significant changes to children’s online lives in years: a planned ban on social media platforms offering services to children under the age of 16.

Published on 15 June 2026 by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology, the announcement sets out a bold new direction for online safety, with the Government saying it wants to “give kids their childhood back”.

That is quite a phrase, but it will resonate with many parents. For years, families have been trying to manage smartphones, apps, social media pressure, endless scrolling, online strangers, livestreams, algorithms and, more recently, AI chatbots. It is a lot. In fact, it is probably too much to expect parents to deal with alone.

What is being proposed?

The Government plans to stop social media platforms from offering services to under 16s. According to the announcement, this would include platforms such as Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook and X.

The proposed model is expected to follow a similar approach to Australia, targeting user to user platforms whose purpose is social interaction, content posting and algorithm driven feeds.

Messaging services such as WhatsApp and Signal are not expected to be included in the social media ban.

The first set of regulations could be brought before Parliament before Christmas, with protections expected to come into force in Spring 2027.

More than just a social media ban

This is not only about banning access to social media apps. The Government is also proposing wider protections around some of the features that can cause harm to children online.

These include restrictions on livestreaming and strangers communicating with children. Importantly, these extra restrictions could apply beyond traditional social media platforms, including gaming sites.

That matters, because a lot of children’s online lives no longer sit neatly inside one app or one category. Social interaction, messaging, livestreaming, gaming and algorithmic recommendations are now all blended together.

The Government says these protections will also be switched on by default for 16 and 17 year olds, to avoid a sudden cliff edge when a child turns 16.

AI companion chatbots are also in the spotlight

One of the most interesting parts of the announcement concerns AI chatbots.

So called AI romantic companion chatbots, designed to simulate sexual relationships or roleplay with users, will be required to enforce a minimum age of 18. Similar intimate features will also be restricted for under 18s on AI chatbots more widely.

This is an important development. AI companion apps are moving incredibly quickly, and many parents may not even know they exist, let alone understand how emotionally persuasive they can be.

As AI becomes more human sounding, more available and more integrated into apps, this area is going to need serious attention. It is not enough to think of online safety as simply blocking rude words or removing harmful posts. We now have systems that can chat, flatter, persuade, roleplay and build emotional dependence.

Age checks will be the difficult bit

The big question, of course, is how this will actually work.

Anyone who has spent more than five minutes around young people and technology knows that children are often extremely good at finding ways around restrictions. The Government says it will learn from Australia’s experience and introduce highly effective age assurance measures to support compliance.

Ofcom will conduct a rapid study into effective age assurance for checking whether someone is over 16. The Technology Secretary has also asked Ofcom for an urgent review of its enforcement capabilities and a clear enforcement strategy.

This is where the whole thing will either succeed or fall apart.

If the age checks are too weak, children will simply bypass them. If they are too heavy handed, adults may rightly worry about privacy, identity checks and handing more personal data to large technology companies.

Getting that balance right will be crucial.

Parents appear to support action

The Government says the announcement follows one of its biggest national conversations, with more than 116,000 responses from parents, children and experts.

According to the Government, 9 in 10 parents said they would support a social media ban for children under 16. It also says two thirds of young people agreed that children younger than 16 should not be allowed to use at least some social media platforms.

That is significant. This is not just adults shouting at TikTok from the sidelines. Many young people appear to recognise that there is a problem too.

Keir Starmer ©House of Commons
Keir Starmer ©House of Commons

Tech companies have had years to fix this

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said tech companies had “their chance and failed”, while Technology Secretary Liz Kendall said companies had “countless opportunities to keep children safe”.

Whether you agree with the exact form of the ban or not, it is hard to argue that the current system is working well.

Children are growing up in an online environment designed by some of the most powerful companies in the world, using systems built to maximise attention, engagement and screen time. The algorithms do not care whether a child has homework, needs sleep, is anxious, is vulnerable, or is being drawn into something harmful.

They are designed to keep people watching, scrolling, reacting and returning.

The Gadget Man view

As someone who loves technology, I do not think the answer is to pretend the internet is bad and children should be wrapped in cotton wool. Technology can be brilliant. It can educate, connect, entertain and inspire.

But childhood should not be outsourced to algorithms.

There is a huge difference between children using technology creatively and children being pulled into endless feeds, livestream pressure, anonymous messaging, harmful trends and AI driven emotional traps.

The challenge is that the online world has become too powerful, too persuasive and too profitable for parents to manage alone. Many families are trying to set boundaries while their children’s friends are all using the same apps, the same platforms and the same online spaces.

That makes it very difficult for one household to say no.

A national rule changes the conversation. It gives parents something firmer to stand on. It also forces the technology companies to design systems around children’s wellbeing, rather than leaving families to pick up the pieces afterwards.

But enforcement and privacy must be taken seriously

There are still major questions to answer.

How will age verification work? What data will be collected? Who will store it? Will smaller platforms be able to comply? Will children be pushed into less regulated corners of the internet? What happens when a child uses a parent’s account or device?

These details matter.

A poorly designed system could create new risks while trying to solve old ones. A well designed system could mark a genuine turning point in how we treat children’s digital lives.

A cultural shift, not just a technical fix

The Government has framed this as part of a wider effort to reclaim childhood, including more access to sport, creativity, nature and the arts.

That is important, because banning or restricting something only works properly if there is something better to replace it with.

Children need places to go, things to do, people to meet and chances to explore the world beyond a screen. If this policy is going to work, it needs to be part of a bigger cultural change, not just a login screen that says “computer says no”.

Final thoughts

This is a landmark moment for online safety in the UK.

The proposed social media ban for under 16s will be controversial, complicated and difficult to enforce perfectly. But the fact that the Government is now prepared to draw a clear line shows how serious the issue has become.

For years, parents have been told to use parental controls, have conversations, monitor screen time and keep up with every new app. Those things still matter, but they are not enough on their own.

The online world has changed childhood. Now the Government is saying it wants to change the online world in response.

Whether this becomes a successful turning point will depend on the details, but one thing is clear: the days of letting tech companies mark their own homework may finally be coming to an end.

SAYPH: The Smartphone That Isn’t Trying to Be Everything

There’s a quiet shift happening in the world of tech. For years, smartphones have been on a relentless march toward doing more, showing more, and demanding more of our attention. Now, a UK startup called Sayph is heading in the opposite direction… and it’s rather refreshing.

Sayph has unveiled what it describes as the UK’s first responsible smartphone for children aged 8 to 16. Not a cut-down adult device. Not a standard handset wrapped in layers of parental controls. Instead, this is something altogether different, a phone designed from the ground up with a very specific purpose in mind.

A Middle Ground That Actually Exists

For many parents, the decision is a familiar dilemma. No phone at all, or a fully fledged smartphone with all the baggage that comes with it. Social media, open internet access, endless notifications… it’s a lot.

Sayph positions itself squarely in the middle.

Out of the box, the device focuses on the essentials. Calls, one-to-one messaging, and location tracking. That’s it. No social media apps. No app store. No web browser unless a parent explicitly decides to enable it.

This isn’t about locking things down after the fact. It’s about starting from a place of simplicity and control.

Built Different, Not Bolted On

What makes this interesting is the philosophy behind it. Most devices rely on add-ons and restrictions layered over a standard smartphone experience. Sayph flips that approach completely.

Everything is intentional.

Contacts must be approved. Communication is controlled. And instead of navigating endless menus and toggles, parents use a companion web app designed to give clear oversight without turning into a full-time job.

It’s less about surveillance, more about structure.

Independence Without the Noise

Co-founder Ben Humphrey sums it up neatly, describing the challenge many families face today: giving children independence without exposing them to the pressures of always-on digital life.

Walking to school. Visiting friends. Staying in touch. These are the real-world use cases Sayph is built around.

Not scrolling. Not chasing likes. Not being pulled into the endless gravity of online platforms.

Fellow co-founder Ami Penolver frames it slightly differently, positioning the device as pro-childhood rather than anti-technology. It’s a subtle but important distinction, and one that feels increasingly relevant.

Pricing and Positioning

At £189 for the handset and £5 per month for the parental platform, Sayph is clearly aiming to sit in an accessible space. Not a premium luxury device, but not a disposable gadget either.

It’s a considered purchase. One that reflects a shift in thinking about what a child’s first phone should actually be.

Tech With a Social Angle

There’s also an interesting layer beyond the hardware itself. Sayph has built a social impact model into its rollout.

For every ten devices purchased within a school, one is donated to a pupil premium child. For every hundred devices sold overall, another is provided to a looked-after child.

It’s a small touch, but one that hints at a broader ambition. Not just selling devices, but shaping how children access technology in the first place.

There’s something quite compelling about a product that deliberately does less. In a market obsessed with features, specs and endless capability, Sayph feels like a bit of a reset button.

A phone that knows exactly what it’s for… and more importantly, what it isn’t.

And in today’s world, that might just be its biggest feature.

Available now at Sayph