Report from DigWatch
In Brief – The Ecuador National Assembly is considering legislation to ban teens under age 15 from social media. The measure broadly covers digital platforms that enable public interaction, messaging, and content sharing, encompassing most major online services where users connect with each other. Unlike social media age thresholds being considered in other countries, where backers often argue that they are needed to protect teen mental health or privacy, the Ecuadoran measure is primarily driven by security concerns. The country has faced a sharp rise in organized crime, including higher homicide rates and growing criminal networks. Social media reportedly plays a role in youth gang recruitment, with about 27% of minors approached by criminal gangs saying that the first contact occurred online. Vulnerable adolescents are targeted with offers combining financial incentives and normalized depictions of violence. The age limit is being proposed as part of a broader regulatory push that includes cybersecurity reforms and laws directly targeting digital recruitment practices.
Context – Online age limits and related age verification are on the march globally. Australia’s 16-year-old threshold for holding social media accounts is the highest profile example, and officials in countries like France, Spain, and the UK have grabbed headlines by calling for similar age limits. The trend is increasingly gaining traction in developing countries as well, including Indonesia, Malaysia, India, Brazil and Egypt. These countries tend to have significantly younger populations and oftentimes more authoritarian governments. Keeping younger people off alternative media and communications platforms until their late teens would never have anything to do with politics, would it? Before age-checking social media to get teens off their phones became vogue, stopping access to porn was the headline rationale to employ online age verification, including in France and the US. It’s surprising that Ecuador is the first country to propose online age limits as an anti-gang tactic.
