
German panel sets 13 as social media age floor as global push for restrictions widens
Berlin's expert commission rejects blanket bans, while Malaysia and UAE enforce stricter age limits, highlighting a fragmented international response to child online safety.
The German government’s expert commission on child protection in the digital world has recommended a minimum age of 13 for independent social media accounts, explicitly rejecting the blanket bans adopted or proposed in several other countries. The 56-point catalogue, handed to Family Minister Karin Prien (CDU) on Wednesday, frames digital safety as a triad of protection, empowerment and participation, arguing that excluding minors from platforms would deny them rights to expression and digital citizenship. Prien endorsed the 13-year threshold and called for a legal requirement that platforms serving younger children be demonstrably low-risk and age-appropriate.
The German position contrasts with a wave of stricter age floors internationally. In Kuala Lumpur, Communications Minister Fahmi Fadzil confirmed that Malaysia’s Child Protection Code, effective 1 June, sets 16 as the minimum age for social media accounts, enforced through mandatory verification against government-issued identity documents. The United Arab Emirates, under a cabinet resolution announced on 18 June, prohibits under-15s from holding personal accounts, with a 12-month compliance window for platforms. Australia’s existing ban for under-16s remains a reference point, and several European governments, including France and Spain, are considering similar legislation. Within Germany, the CDU party congress had previously adopted a 14-year minimum, while the SPD supports the same limit, revealing a gap between the commission’s expert advice and political sentiment.
The divergence reflects fundamentally different diagnoses of the problem. The German commission, co-chaired by educational researcher Olaf Köller, insists that the digital environment must adapt to the child, not the reverse, and places primary obligations on platform operators: no algorithmic feeds, no personalised advertising, and no manipulative design patterns for users under 18. In Malaysia, the “Await 16” initiative frames the restriction as a temporary delay to allow cognitive and emotional maturation, with data minimisation rules requiring deletion of verification data after use. In the UAE, psychiatrists cited by Gulf News describe cases of mood disorders, self-harm and sleep loss linked to excessive screen time among adolescents, lending clinical weight to the ban. The German commission, by contrast, warns that prohibition alone is a “sham debate” and that media literacy education, including a proposed mandatory “AI swimming certificate” for primary pupils, is essential.
The recommendations now move into the political process. Prien has said she will push for EU-level legislation mandating “safety by design” from platforms, while the German government is expected to produce a comprehensive strategy by September. In Malaysia, the codes are already binding, with financial penalties for non-compliance. The UAE’s resolution gives platforms until mid-2027 to implement age verification. The international regulatory landscape is thus splintering between outright prohibition and graduated, design-focused models, with no common standard yet emerging for what constitutes adequate protection of minors online.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
Germany's expert commission on child protection in the digital world recommends no blanket ban on social media for minors. Instead, it proposes a triad of protection, empowerment, and participation, including digital literacy certificates for students and stronger obligations for tech platforms. The approach emphasizes education and parental guidance over outright prohibition.
Malaysia has set a minimum age of 16 for social media use and will impose fines up to 10 million ringgit on platforms that fail to enforce age verification. The new online safety law and child protection code aim to shield minors from harmful content and exploitation. The government stresses strict compliance and a safe digital environment.
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