EU welcomes G7 adoption of online child protection principles
G7 adopts EU-inspired principles to strengthen child safety online.
The European Commission has welcomed a new agreement by G7 digital and technology ministers on a shared set of principles aimed at improving online safety for children and teenagers. The principles reflect approaches already present in several EU initiatives, including measures focused on online safety, digital literacy and the protection of minors.
The principles build on existing EU measures, including the Digital Services Act, the Better Internet for Kids Strategy and the AI Act. They focus on improving online safety while safeguarding privacy, fundamental rights and access to digital opportunities.
The framework promotes safety-by-design measures, privacy-conscious age assurance tools, stronger protections against harmful and illegal content, parental controls, and digital literacy initiatives. It also promotes greater cooperation between technology companies, researchers, governments and civil society organisations.
Why does it matter?
Governments are increasingly examining how digital platforms, recommendation systems and generative AI tools affect children’s wellbeing, privacy and online experiences. Concerns about harmful content, exploitation and age-inappropriate services have prompted policymakers worldwide to explore new approaches to online child protection.
The G7 agreement signals growing international convergence around child safety principles, while emphasising the need to balance protection measures with privacy, fundamental rights and access to digital opportunities.
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