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Edition of 10:00 CETTuesday, June 23, 2026
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Society & CultureTuesday, June 23, 2026

Blocked by a Politician, Banned by a State: The Global Struggle Over Children and Screens

From Nova Scotia to Muscat, governments are racing to restrict young people's social media use, even as critics warn that bans alone ignore the architecture of addiction.

In late June, Shara Vickers, a resident of Sydney Mines, Nova Scotia, tried to view her local MLA’s Facebook page and found herself blocked. The digital door had been shut after she criticised the politician’s dismissive tone toward constituent feedback. The incident, she later wrote, was trivial in itself, but it crystallised a larger unease: if elected representatives use social media to bypass traditional engagement, what happens when young people are locked out of these platforms entirely? Her question arrived just as a cascade of governments from the Arabian Peninsula to Westminster were drafting laws to do precisely that.

Within days, Oman’s Telecommunications Regulatory Authority launched a public consultation on banning children under 16 from social media, following a similar Emirati restriction for under-15s. In Washington, the House Energy and Commerce Committee announced a bipartisan deal to tighten rules for platforms and young users, while the United Kingdom formalised its own under-16 ban and signalled further curbs on infinite scroll and AI chatbots. Yet the rush to legislate has been met by a counter-argument, articulated most forcefully in the Arabic-language press: that prohibition without redesign is like banning cars instead of mandating seat belts and traffic laws. The real engine of harm, this view holds, is not the age of the user but the attention-economy architecture that rewards emotional volatility, endless scrolling, and algorithmic rabbit holes.

That architecture has consequences that are only beginning to be measured. In the United Arab Emirates, security agencies warn that online extortion often begins with a fake peer slowly building trust inside a game or chat app, then weaponising private images—sometimes altered with deepfake tools—to trap a child in silence. In Argentina, a national study of over 9,000 people found that four in ten young people aged 15 to 29 had gambled online recently or habitually; three in ten experienced anxiety when they could not place a bet. The money vanishes not as banknotes but as numbers on a screen, and parents often discover the debt only after moods have darkened and schoolwork has collapsed. Meanwhile, researchers in Scotland reported that just one in five adolescents meets the recommended maximum of two hours of recreational screen time per day, with the deficit directly eating into sleep and physical activity—the very foundations of long-term brain health.

The responses are diverging in telling ways. London is pairing its ban with a proposal to compel platforms to make content from public-service broadcasters and other “trusted news sources” more visible, a move the culture department frames as a bulwark against misinformation. In Indonesia, child-protection advocates have cautioned that access restrictions must not erase children’s right to expression. And in the Levant, commentators insist that any durable solution must include young people themselves as partners in defining the problem, not merely as recipients of adult decrees. The blocked constituent in Nova Scotia, for her part, worries that a sudden enthusiasm for bans may have less to do with safety than with limiting the perspectives that social media, for all its flaws, can expose.

The screen does not smell of anything, leaves no track marks, and can be carried silently into bed. It is a portal that can lead a teenager into a betting pit, a blackmailer’s grip, or a feed engineered to keep the eyes locked. The question that now travels from Muscat to Glasgow to Buenos Aires is not simply whether to raise the drawbridge at age 15 or 16, but whether the bridge itself can be rebuilt so that crossing it does not mean walking into a trap.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 4 languages

44%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Continental European pressLatin American press
Continental European press/ Nordic
AlarmPaternalism

A Swedish campaign warns that children are coming home from summer break with gambling debts instead of memories. More than a quarter of ninth-grade boys have bet money in the past year, and school visits reveal a silent epidemic fuelled by always-on digital access.

Latin American press/ Market
AlarmUrgency

The summer of silent gambling addiction: online betting platforms turn bedrooms into invisible casinos. With the 2026 World Cup approaching, specialists warn that the digital betting boom will multiply addiction risks among young people, leaving them with debts instead of experiences.

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Upd. 10:29 AM4 languages · 7 outlets
PreviousSociety & CultureNext
7 outlets|4 languages|3 min read
Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Blocked by a Politician, Banned by a State: The Global Struggle Over Children and Screens

From Nova Scotia to Muscat, governments are racing to restrict young people's social media use, even as critics warn that bans alone ignore the architecture of addiction.

In late June, Shara Vickers, a resident of Sydney Mines, Nova Scotia, tried to view her local MLA’s Facebook page and found herself blocked. The digital door had been shut after she criticised the politician’s dismissive tone toward constituent feedback. The incident, she later wrote, was trivial in itself, but it crystallised a larger unease: if elected representatives use social media to bypass traditional engagement, what happens when young people are locked out of these platforms entirely? Her question arrived just as a cascade of governments from the Arabian Peninsula to Westminster were drafting laws to do precisely that.

Within days, Oman’s Telecommunications Regulatory Authority launched a public consultation on banning children under 16 from social media, following a similar Emirati restriction for under-15s. In Washington, the House Energy and Commerce Committee announced a bipartisan deal to tighten rules for platforms and young users, while the United Kingdom formalised its own under-16 ban and signalled further curbs on infinite scroll and AI chatbots. Yet the rush to legislate has been met by a counter-argument, articulated most forcefully in the Arabic-language press: that prohibition without redesign is like banning cars instead of mandating seat belts and traffic laws. The real engine of harm, this view holds, is not the age of the user but the attention-economy architecture that rewards emotional volatility, endless scrolling, and algorithmic rabbit holes.

That architecture has consequences that are only beginning to be measured. In the United Arab Emirates, security agencies warn that online extortion often begins with a fake peer slowly building trust inside a game or chat app, then weaponising private images—sometimes altered with deepfake tools—to trap a child in silence. In Argentina, a national study of over 9,000 people found that four in ten young people aged 15 to 29 had gambled online recently or habitually; three in ten experienced anxiety when they could not place a bet. The money vanishes not as banknotes but as numbers on a screen, and parents often discover the debt only after moods have darkened and schoolwork has collapsed. Meanwhile, researchers in Scotland reported that just one in five adolescents meets the recommended maximum of two hours of recreational screen time per day, with the deficit directly eating into sleep and physical activity—the very foundations of long-term brain health.

The responses are diverging in telling ways. London is pairing its ban with a proposal to compel platforms to make content from public-service broadcasters and other “trusted news sources” more visible, a move the culture department frames as a bulwark against misinformation. In Indonesia, child-protection advocates have cautioned that access restrictions must not erase children’s right to expression. And in the Levant, commentators insist that any durable solution must include young people themselves as partners in defining the problem, not merely as recipients of adult decrees. The blocked constituent in Nova Scotia, for her part, worries that a sudden enthusiasm for bans may have less to do with safety than with limiting the perspectives that social media, for all its flaws, can expose.

The screen does not smell of anything, leaves no track marks, and can be carried silently into bed. It is a portal that can lead a teenager into a betting pit, a blackmailer’s grip, or a feed engineered to keep the eyes locked. The question that now travels from Muscat to Glasgow to Buenos Aires is not simply whether to raise the drawbridge at age 15 or 16, but whether the bridge itself can be rebuilt so that crossing it does not mean walking into a trap.

Source divergence

Society & Culture · 7 outlets · 4 languages

44%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral33%
Critical67%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 4 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Continental European pressLatin American press
Continental European press/ Nordic
AlarmPaternalism

A Swedish campaign warns that children are coming home from summer break with gambling debts instead of memories. More than a quarter of ninth-grade boys have bet money in the past year, and school visits reveal a silent epidemic fuelled by always-on digital access.

Latin American press/ Market
AlarmUrgency

The summer of silent gambling addiction: online betting platforms turn bedrooms into invisible casinos. With the 2026 World Cup approaching, specialists warn that the digital betting boom will multiply addiction risks among young people, leaving them with debts instead of experiences.

This story appeared in

7 outlets · 4 languages

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