Child safety online debate at EuroDIG 2026 shifts focus from bans to platform design

Participants at EuroDIG 2026 debated whether social media age bans are an effective way to protect minors online, with speakers warning that blanket restrictions may oversimplify a far more complex issue involving platform design, digital literacy, privacy, and children’s rights.

The session, titled ‘Youth Online Safety – Are Social Media Age Bans a Solution?’, focused on age verification, platform accountability, recommendation systems, and the broader European regulatory response to online harms affecting children and young people.

Speakers broadly agreed on the objective of improving child safety online, but many questioned whether blanket bans or rigid age restrictions would, in practice, effectively reduce harm.

Diya Aravinthan argued that protecting children online requires approaches that are proportionate, effective, and aligned with how young people actually use digital platforms. She warned that broad social media bans risk pushing children towards workarounds such as VPNs, shared accounts, or alternative services, potentially making online risks harder to monitor rather than reducing them.

Aravinthan also stressed that social media platforms cannot be understood only as sources of harm. She said young people often rely on online spaces for communication, friendships, creativity, civic participation, learning, and access to information.

Referring to Australian research conducted after the country’s under-16 social media restrictions, she said many young people increasingly consume news and current affairs through social media rather than traditional media channels.

Several speakers, therefore, argued that policymakers should focus more on safer platform design and stronger platform accountability rather than treating online safety primarily as an access-control problem.

Aravinthan called for layered protections based on age-appropriate design rather than a binary ‘access or no access’ model. She highlighted stronger privacy defaults, limits on profiling and targeted advertising, and safer platform features for minors as examples of more proportionate safeguards.

She also argued that recommendation systems and algorithmic feeds represent a central challenge because they actively guide minors toward attention-maximising and potentially harmful content.

Lennart Wetzel of Snapchat similarly argued that platforms carry major responsibility for protecting younger users. He said services should invest continuously in safety-by-design features, moderation systems, parental tools, and age-appropriate safeguards. Wetzel also warned that restrictions targeting only selected platforms may simply push young people towards other, potentially less safe or less regulated services.

He cited Australia’s social media restrictions as an example, noting that Snapchat had disabled or locked more than 415,000 accounts in response to the law while also observing migration to alternative services.

The debate also focused heavily on age verification and age assurance technologies.

Several speakers warned that current age-verification systems remain technically imperfect and raise significant privacy, proportionality, and inclusion concerns.

Aravinthan said platforms should not need to know users’ exact identities or precise ages to provide stronger protections for minors. She supported approaches based on data minimisation and privacy-preserving verification.

Wetzel added that even small error rates in age-assurance systems can produce large-scale consequences when applied across millions of users, potentially excluding legitimate users while failing to prevent circumvention.

Carmela Troncoso provided the strongest technical critique of age-verification systems. She argued that making age restrictions difficult to bypass often requires more intrusive forms of surveillance and data collection.

Troncoso warned that some systems rely on biometrics or behavioural analysis, creating additional privacy risks for children and young people. She also said stronger anti-circumvention measures may push minors towards unsafe tools or services that themselves collect and monetise user data.

According to Troncoso, current technologies risk creating substantial privacy and exclusion harms while offering only limited practical effectiveness.

The discussion also explored the wider European regulatory context.

Andrea Tognoni of the European Commission argued that debates about social media bans should not be separated from existing EU frameworks, including the Digital Services Act (DSA), the AI Act, the Audiovisual Media Services Directive, and the Better Internet for Kids strategy.

Tognoni said several member states are already advancing national measures on child protection and age restrictions, creating growing pressure for greater European harmonisation.

Speakers repeatedly warned that fragmented national rules could create inconsistent standards across Europe and undermine the coherence of the digital single market.

Wetzel argued that a risk-based European approach under frameworks such as the DSA offers a more sustainable path than isolated national bans.

The session also highlighted concerns that youth voices remain underrepresented in debates surrounding online safety regulation.

Stefanie Quintao of TikTok said many youth-led and child-rights organisations oppose blanket bans and believe they may unintentionally push children into less protected online spaces.

Both Quintao and Aravinthan stressed that young people use digital platforms for far more than entertainment, and that policy discussions often fail to reflect the lived realities of younger users.

Several audience interventions pushed the discussion further towards the broader political economy of social media platforms.

Some participants argued that the core issue lies not primarily in children accessing technology, but in platform business models built around surveillance, engagement maximisation, and algorithmic amplification.

Others stressed that digital literacy, parental support, and education remain essential complements to regulation.

One participant compared online safety to teaching children how to cross a road: legal rules and infrastructure matter, but children also require guidance, gradual learning, and the development of judgement.

The session concluded with broad agreement that protecting minors online requires a multi-layered and rights-based approach rather than a single regulatory instrument.

Participants broadly agreed that age bans alone are unlikely to solve underlying problems linked to harmful platform design, recommendation systems, and digital business models.

The closing synthesis stressed that effective child protection requires balancing privacy, proportionality, platform accountability, harmonised regulation, digital literacy, and meaningful youth participation.

EuroDIG 2026 took place on 26 and 27 May at the Charlemagne Building of the European Commission in Brussels under the theme ‘European Voices for the Future of the Internet – Celebrating 20 Years of .eu and the Beginning of a New Internet Governance Era’.

Digital Watch Observatory followed EuroDIG 2026 through a dedicated event page, featuring session information and reporting from Brussels.

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YouTube expands AI transparency rules with automatic content detection

YouTube is updating its approach to AI-generated content by introducing more visible disclosure labels and new automatic detection systems designed to improve transparency for viewers and creators.

The update follows growing concerns around realistic synthetic media, manipulated videos, and generative AI tools across major digital platforms.

Under the revised system, labels for photorealistic or meaningfully AI-altered or generated content will appear directly below long-form videos and as overlays on Shorts. Less realistic, animated, or slightly altered content will continue to be disclosed in expanded video descriptions.

The company is also rolling out internal AI detection signals to identify AI-generated content when creators fail to disclose it themselves. If YouTube’s systems detect significant use of photorealistic AI, the platform may automatically apply a label.

Creators will still be able to update the disclosure status in YouTube Studio if they believe their content has been incorrectly identified as AI-generated. However, disclosures will remain permanent in some cases, including content created with YouTube’s own AI tools, such as Veo or Dream Screen, and content that contains C2PA metadata indicating that AI fully generated it.

YouTube said the updated labels are intended to balance transparency with creator control. The company also said that a disclosure label alone does not change how a video is recommended or whether it is eligible to earn money.

Why does it matter?

YouTube’s update reflects a broader shift towards platform-level governance of synthetic media and generative AI content. As realistic AI-generated video becomes easier to produce, platforms face growing pressure to make synthetic content more visible to users while preserving creator workflows and avoiding over-penalisation. The move also shows how provenance tools such as C2PA and automated detection systems are becoming part of mainstream content governance.

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UK’s Ofcom fines adult website over missing age checks

UK regulator Ofcom has fined adult content provider Youngtek Solutions £600,000 after finding that the company failed to implement legally required age assurance measures designed to prevent children from accessing pornographic content online.

According to Ofcom, Youngtek Solutions operated four adult websites without ‘highly effective age assurance’ from 25 July to 22 September 2025, breaching obligations introduced under the UK’s Online Safety Act. The regulator imposed a £500,000 financial penalty for the age-check failures, alongside a further £100,000 fine for failing to respond on time to a legally binding request for information.

Ofcom said sites that allow pornographic material must use highly effective age assurance to prevent children from readily accessing such content. The regulator warned that companies that fail to comply with or miss deadlines for formal information requests can face enforcement action.

If a provider fails to pay a fine, Ofcom can seek recovery of the penalty. Where appropriate, it can also seek court orders for business-disruption measures, including requiring payment providers or advertisers to withdraw services from a platform or requiring internet service providers to block a site in the UK.

Youngtek Solutions has since implemented age assurance on all sites covered by the investigation. Ofcom said it will continue monitoring the sites to ensure their age-checking methods remain effective in preventing children from accessing pornographic content.

Why does it matter?

The fine shows Ofcom beginning to use its enforcement powers under the Online Safety Act against adult services that fail to implement child protection measures. The case also signals that age assurance obligations are not merely a compliance formality: non-compliant services may face financial penalties, information-gathering enforcement, and potentially business-disruptive measures if they fail to meet their legal duties.

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EuroDIG 2026 opening plenary examines democracy and digital disruption

The opening plenary session of EuroDIG 2026 examined whether digital disruption is weakening or revitalising democracy in Europe, with speakers highlighting concerns about disinformation, declining trust in institutions, AI-driven manipulation, and the growing concentration of power among major technology platforms.

Held in Brussels under the theme ‘Democracy: Stifled or Revived by Digital Disruption of the Public Sphere?’, the discussion brought together representatives from the Council of Europe, the decentralised social media platform Mastodon, and the fact-checking organisation Correctiv. The session also incorporated recommendations from youth participants involved in the EuroDIG youth dialogue process.

Florence Ranson, moderating the session, opened by summarising concerns raised by youth delegates, who argued that European democracies are struggling to keep pace with technological developments and called for stronger regulation, media literacy, fact-checking initiatives, and civil society engagement.

Claudia Luciani, Director of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities at the Council of Europe, warned that democratic backsliding in some European states is occurring alongside growing digital threats. She pointed to restrictions on civil society, limits on press freedom, and the use of emergency powers that weaken democratic oversight mechanisms.

Luciani also highlighted disinformation, foreign information manipulation, and AI-generated content as key risks to electoral integrity and public trust. According to her, the rapid pace of technological change is outstripping existing democratic safeguards. She argued that the challenge is not to halt digital transformation but to ensure that it develops in line with human rights, democracy, and the rule of law.

Felix Hlatky, Executive Director of Mastodon, criticised the concentration of influence among a small number of major technology companies, arguing that advertising-driven business models incentivise the amplification of polarising content and the extensive collection of user data. As an alternative, Hlatky presented decentralised social-media models such as Mastodon and the broader Fediverse, which he said allow greater local autonomy, community moderation, and linguistic diversity through independently operated servers.

He also warned that the speed of online misinformation makes correction increasingly difficult, arguing that decentralised moderation structures may offer more responsive approaches to managing harmful content.

Caroline Lindekamp, Director for Fact-Checking at Correctiv, focused on the role of fact-checking organisations and media literacy initiatives in countering online misinformation. She argued that large online platforms continue to amplify misleading content despite existing moderation partnerships and fact-checking programmes.

Lindekamp highlighted the work of the European Fact-Checking Standards Network, which coordinates monitoring activities, data-sharing projects, and media-literacy efforts across Europe. However, she warned that many initiatives remain dependent on short-term project funding and lack sustainable financial support.

The discussion also addressed broader questions surrounding public trust and institutional accountability. Luciani cited declining trust in traditional media and democratic institutions, while both Luciani and Lindekamp stressed the importance of stronger enforcement of existing European digital regulations, including the Digital Services Act.

Audience questions focused on issues including inclusive trust-building, smaller language communities, and the relationship between fact-checking and cybercrime investigations. Speakers highlighted the need for greater platform transparency, stronger cross-sector cooperation, and accessible multilingual engagement.

The session concluded with broad agreement among speakers that safeguarding the digital public sphere will require stronger enforcement of existing regulations, sustainable support for fact-checking and media-literacy ecosystems, and more accountable and pluralistic online governance models.

EuroDIG 2026 takes place on 26 and 27 May at the Charlemagne Building of the European Commission in Brussels. Hosted by EURid, the registry for the .eu domain name, the event marks 20 years of the .eu domain under the broader theme ‘European Voices for the Future of the Internet – Celebrating 20 Years of .eu and the Beginning of a New Internet Governance Era’.

Digital Watch Observatory is following EuroDIG 2026 through a dedicated event page, featuring session information and reporting from Brussels.

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TikTok launches family guide for safer digital habits

TikTok has partnered with TOUCH Cyber Wellness to launch a family digital check-in guide aimed at helping parents and teenagers develop safer and healthier online habits in Singapore.

The initiative supports Singapore’s ‘Digital for Life’ movement and was unveiled during the 2025 ‘Our Digital Journey’ programme by Rahayu Mahzam, Minister of State for Digital Development and Information and Health.

Designed as a practical toolkit for families, the guide encourages open discussions around digital behaviour rather than relying only on one-way rules. Families can use printable materials, self-discovery profiles, and conversation prompts to understand online habits better and agree on shared boundaries.

TikTok also introduced a mobile-friendly digital hub featuring safety resources and a video from Singaporean creator Denise Teo. Speakers at the launch event said digital well-being requires cooperation among families, schools, technology companies, and policymakers, while panellists highlighted resilience, curiosity, and continuous dialogue as key to helping young users navigate online spaces safely.

The initiative follows increased regulatory scrutiny of online safety in Singapore. In March 2026, the Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) issued letters of caution to TikTok and X over serious weaknesses in their measures to proactively detect and remove harmful content. Both platforms were placed under enhanced supervision and required to report progress on rectification measures.

IMDA said it found 17 cases of terrorism-related content shared by Singapore-based TikTok accounts in 2025, and that the platform removed the content only after the regulator flagged the cases. TikTok said teen accounts already include more than 50 built-in safety and privacy protections, including default screen time limits and restricted content settings.

Why does it matter?

The initiative shows how platform safety efforts are increasingly moving beyond content moderation and into digital literacy, family engagement, and user resilience. In Singapore, that softer approach sits alongside a more formal regulatory push requiring major platforms to improve detection, reporting, child safety, and accountability for harmful content.

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Vietnam introduces mandatory labels for AI-generated content

Vietnam will require disclosure labels for certain AI-generated and AI-edited content from May under a new government decree aimed at improving online transparency.

Under Decree 142/2026/ND-CP, organisations and individuals using AI systems must disclose when content has been created or altered by AI in ways that could affect perceptions of authenticity.

The rules apply to AI-generated or AI-edited audio, image, and video content, particularly material imitating real people or realistic events. Particularly, it applies to content that imitates the appearance or voice of real people or recreates real-life events in a convincing manner. According to the decree, disclosures must be clear, visible, and recognisable before or during user access to the content.

The decree states that disclosures designed to obscure the AI-generated nature of content will not satisfy the requirements. Anyways, several exemptions are included. Several exemptions are included, such as technical quality improvements that do not materially alter content.

The framework also excludes certain AI-assisted editing functions, including spelling correction, translation, summarisation, and grammar editing, where original meaning is preserved. Additional exemptions apply to internal organisational use and controlled research or testing environments not intended for public release. At the end, content produced during research, development or testing activities in controlled environments and not released to the public is also an exemption.

Authorities said disclosures may take different forms depending on content type, including labels, captions, interface notices, or audio announcements. Labels may appear directly on content, in titles, captions and descriptions, through platform interfaces or even as audio announcements. Films and artistic productions may include disclosures in opening sections, end credits or supporting materials.

Responsibility for compliance will apply both to parties generating AI content and those distributing it publicly. Parties generating or editing AI content must provide the information needed for labelling, while those publishing the material to the public must ensure disclosure rules are followed.

Vietnam’s Ministry of Science and Technology is expected to publish additional technical guidance related to the implementation of the disclosure framework. Officials said the guidance would not create additional administrative procedures or business conditions or obligations beyond those already outlined in the decree.

Why does it matter?

The decree reflects broader international efforts to improve transparency around AI-generated media as synthetic content becomes more realistic and widely accessible. Disclosure requirements are increasingly being explored by governments as a way to address misinformation risks, impersonation concerns, and public trust in digital content.

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European Commission advances AI transparency code under EU AI Act

The European Commission’s AI Office has convened a new round of working group meetings and workshops on the forthcoming Code of Practice on Marking and Labelling of AI-Generated Content.

The discussions brought together providers of generative AI systems and models, technology companies, industry representatives, civil society organisations and academic experts. Feedback from the meetings will inform the third and final draft of the code, expected in early June.

The code is intended to support transparency obligations under the AI Act, including requirements linked to marking, labelling, disclosure and detectability of AI-generated content. It covers issues such as synthetic media, deepfakes and certain AI-generated text.

Working Group 1 focused on marking and detection obligations for providers, including a revised multi-layered approach, technical feasibility, benchmarking, compliance frameworks and possible third-party assessments. Industry participants raised concerns over compliance burdens, innovation and feasibility, while civil society and academic experts called for stronger safeguards in the public interest.

Working Group 2 examined disclosure obligations for deployers of generative AI systems, particularly deepfakes and certain AI-generated text. Discussions covered origin disclosure, user-facing labels, proportionality, governance measures, editorial control and the possible development of a uniform EU label.

Additional workshops explored how machine-readable marks, provenance data, visible labels, watermarking systems and an EU-wide icon could work together across the AI value chain. Participants also discussed coordination with other EU rules, including the Digital Services Act, while stressing the need to balance transparency, legal clarity, accessibility and innovation.

Why does it matter?

The code of practice will help determine how AI-generated content is marked, labelled and disclosed across the EU. Its development highlights the practical difficulty of turning transparency obligations into workable rules, particularly when regulators, companies and civil society disagree over technical feasibility, compliance costs, user experience and safeguards against deceptive synthetic media.

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Grokipedia articles show selective political divergence from Wikipedia, research finds

A new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences examined structural and political differences between Wikipedia and Grokipedia, the AI-generated encyclopedia developed by xAI.

Researchers analysed 17,790 matched article pairs drawn from the 20,000 most-edited English-language Wikipedia entries. They found that Grokipedia articles are typically longer, more syntactically complex, and contain fewer references and hyperlinks per 1,000 words than their Wikipedia counterparts.

The study also identified a bimodal pattern across similarity measures, indicating that some Grokipedia entries closely resemble Wikipedia entries, while others diverge substantially in content and structure. Researchers said the findings suggest Grokipedia is not a fully independent alternative to Wikipedia, but often appears as an AI-mediated reconfiguration of Wikipedia content.

The analysis examined ideological differences by evaluating the political orientation of cited news media sources. Researchers found that divergence was concentrated primarily in politically and culturally sensitive topics, including religion, history, politics and literature.

Within those areas, Grokipedia articles showed a relative shift toward more right-leaning cited sources than Wikipedia. However, the study also noted that sources cited on both platforms remained predominantly left-leaning.

Researchers argued that Wikipedia’s human editorial processes make disputes, revisions and bias visible and contestable, while AI-generated systems may embed bias within more opaque automated workflows that are harder to scrutinise publicly.

The paper also raised broader concerns about the governance of AI-generated knowledge systems. Researchers warned that AI-generated encyclopedic content could shape future training datasets and automated information ecosystems, potentially reproducing or amplifying bias without sufficient transparency, accountability or human oversight.

Why does it matter?

The findings add to growing debates over AI-generated knowledge systems, political bias, citation quality and transparency. As generative AI increasingly produces reference and educational material, the key question is not only whether outputs are accurate, but whether their sources, editorial assumptions and revisions can be scrutinised. Grokipedia’s differences from Wikipedia show how automated knowledge systems may reshape information governance while making some forms of bias less visible.

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FTC targets nudify tools over TAKE IT DOWN Act compliance

The US Federal Trade Commission has sent warning letters to 12 websites offering so-called ‘nudify’ tools, expanding its enforcement of the TAKE IT DOWN Act.

The law requires covered platforms to provide a process for people to request the removal of intimate photos or videos shared online without consent, and to remove that content within 48 hours of a valid request.

The letters were sent to companies offering tools that can take a clothed image of a person and generate non-consensual sexualised images by removing clothing. According to the FTC, the companies appear to be violating the law by failing to provide a process for victims to request the removal of non-consensual intimate images from their platforms.

FTC Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson said platforms ‘no longer have any excuses’ and must comply with their obligations under the TAKE IT DOWN Act or face consequences.

The letters urge the companies to comply with the law immediately. Platforms that fail to do so could face FTC legal action and civil penalties of up to $53,088 per violation.

The action follows the FTC’s start of TAKE IT DOWN Act enforcement on 19 May. Ahead of the deadline, Ferguson sent letters to major platforms, including Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Reddit, Snapchat, TikTok and X, reminding them of their compliance obligations.

The FTC has also issued business guidance on compliance with the law, which was signed in May 2025 and gave companies one year to meet its requirements.

Why does it matter?

The warning letters show how the FTC is applying the TAKE IT DOWN Act directly to AI-powered nudify tools, not only mainstream social media platforms. The action reflects growing concern that generative AI can make image-based sexual abuse easier to create and distribute at scale, while placing stronger legal pressure on platforms to give victims a fast removal process.

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